48 Mass. App. Ct. 556 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2000
This controversy is rooted in an inconsistency between the decree plan in a Land Court registration case and the final confirmation plan in a confirmation without registration case which affects the width of a road. We conclude, as did the judge of the Land Court, that the provisions of the decree plan prevail over the confirmation plan, and we affirm the declaratory judgment entered below in favor of the town of Sandwich (town), the current owners of the registered land. See note 1.
The registration parcel is shown on a “Plan of Land in Sandwich” prepared by Charles B. Vail, surveyor, dated October 29, 1972. The plan was filed with the court as plan no. 37821A (decree plan). See Appendix A to this opinion. (In his decision file judge wrote that the notations on the decree plan — “First Confirmation Parcel,” “Second Confirmation Parcel,” and “Registration Parcel” — were inserted by him).
The registration decree and the certificate of title described the registered ¡parcel as being bounded, in part, by “Pine Hill Road and land now or formerly of [the bank].” The registration decree also stated that “[a]ll of said boundaries, except the edge of upland and Pine Hill Road, are determined by the Court to be located as shown on a plan drawn by Charles B. Vail, Surveyor, dated October 29, 1972, as modified and approved by the Court .... So much of the land hereby registered as is included within the limits of said Pine Hill Road is subject to the rights of all persons lawfully entitled thereto in and over the same.” (Emphasis added.)
Most important for present purposes, the decree plan identified the way between the registered parcel and the land owned by the bank as trustee as “Pine Hill (private — 12ft. wide) Rd.” and “a.k.a. Pond Rd. and Kerns Mountain Rd.” (emphasis added). See Appendix A. As shall soon appear, the width of the Pine Hill Road is the focus of this case.
The confirmation case, no. 39248, concerned three parcels of land in Sandwich, two of which bear on this case — the first confirmation parcel and the second confirmation parcel.
The decree in the confirmation case stated, “[S]o much of [the first and second confirmation parcels] as is included within the limits of said Pine Hill Road is subject to the rights of all persons lawfully entitled thereto in and over the same, and there is appurtenant to [the first confirmation parcel] the right to use
On September 4, 1986, more than six years after the town was served with notice of the confirmation proceedings, the town acquired title to the registered parcel, see Appendix A, by deed from Sullivan and Vaughan, and certificate no. 107855 was issued in the name of the town. Then, by mesne conveyances, the defendant acquired title on September 11, 1995, to the first confirmation parcel, see Appendix A, originally owned by the bank as trustee (the bank subsequently became tibe Bank of New England, N.A.). The second confirmation parcel had been acquired by the town’s water district in 1992. See note 1, supra.
In the fall of 1996, the defendant cleared trees and removed stumps, and then rough graded a forty foot wide roadway along Pine Hill Road. This litigation followed.
Discussion. The defendant does not dispute the judge’s observation that the widening of Pine Hill Road to forty feet has the effect of extending into the town’s registered parcel and, to that extent, would make the town’s registered parcel a servient estate without that encumbrance ever having appeared on the town’s certificate of title. See G. L. c. 185, § 46 (holders of a certificate of title take “free from all encumbrances except those noted on the certificate”).
Nevertheless, the defendant argues that the judge was wrong in deciding that the decree plan prevails. The deféndant’s reasons are: (i) the town was a “party” to the confirmation proceedings and is bound by the decree entered in that case; (ii) the requirements of G. L. c. 185, § 86 (no civil action affecting the title to land shall have any effect on registered land unless a qualifying memorandum is filed and registered),
First, the town was not a party to the defendant’s confirmation case. The defendant’s claim is based entirely on the fact that the town was served with notice of the confirmation petition even though that service was more than six years before the town purchased the registered parcel. See note 4, supra.
Until the town purchased the registered parcel in 1986, it had no cognizable interest in, and no reason to be concerned with, the registered parcel or in Pine Hill Road. Indeed, Pine Hill Road had been discontinued as a public way in 1975, five years before the town was served with notice of the confirmation case. The purpose of notice in proceedings affecting title to land is to notify those who have, or may have, an interest in the proceedings, that they may appear and be heard. The town had no cognizable interest when served. For example, the town would have had no right to intervene as a party in the confirmation proceedings. See Mass.R.Civ.P. 24, 365 Mass. 769 (1974). See also D. J. Doyle & Co. v. Darden, 328 Mass. 288, 290 (1952). Since the town was not a party to the confirmation case, it is not bound by the confirmation decree. See Restatement (Second) Judgments § 43 (1982) (“A judgment in an action that determines interests in real or personal property: (1) With respect to the property involved in the action: (a) Conclusively determines the claims of the parties to the action regarding their interests . . .”) (emphasis added). The defendant failed, without justification, to comply with the provisions of G. L. c. 185, § 86, to record and file a memorandum, and the judge was not in error in that respect.
Second, that the defendant purchased the unregistered first confirmation parcel in reliance on the confirmation decree did not endow the defendant with the right to impose a servient estate on a portion of the town’s registered parcel. See Tetrault v. Bruscoe, 398 Mass. 454, 461 (1986) (“[i]n order to affect registered land as the servient estate, an easement must appear
Of course, as Jackson points out at 711, if the town had actual knowledge of a prior unregistered interest, then its registered parcel might have been subject to the claimed easement. However, the defendant has made no showing that the town, when it purchased the registered parcel on September 4, 1986, had actual knowledge of the claims made in the confirmation proceedings commenced in April, 1980. The fact that in April, 1980, the town received notice of the commencement of confirmation proceedings does not help the defendant. In 1980, the town had no interest in land which might be adversely affected by a confirmation decree, and, therefore, the notice, left unexplained, was of no interest to the town. “Actual knowledge,” to which Jackson refers at 711, is a basis for charging a person with notice of a fact, see Demoulas v. Demoulas, 428 Mass. 555, 575 (1998), but absent any reason for the town to believe that the fact — the commencement of the confirmation proceedings — adversely affected an interest of the town, “actual knowledge” of the confirmation proceedings had no legal significance and cannot now prejudice the town. Cf. Killen v. March, 316 Mass. 646, 652 (1944) (buyer of registered land informed of encumbrances by purchase and sale agreement); Wild v. Constantini, 415 Mass. 663, 669 (1993) (petitioner for registration had knowledge of the encumbrance at the time petition filed); Feldman v. Souza, 27 Mass. App. Ct. 1142, 1143-1144 (1989) (owner of dominant estate informed buyer, prior to purchase of registered land, of the encumbrance).
Indeed, the defendant’s argument has merit only when it is turned upside down. It was the bank, the defendant’s predecessor in title, that had received notice in 1974 of the commencement, by Sullivan and Vaughan, of registration proceedings which affected the bank’s land, and it was the bank that assented to the 1977 registration decree, the plan of which showed Pine Hill Road as being only twelve feet in width. The bank’s assent is binding on the defendant as the bank’s successor in title. Further, as the judge appropriately observed, “the Bank should have realized [in 1980] it was, in effect, asserting an adverse claim against registered land when its surveyor created, without apparent authority, a forty foot layout to benefit adjacent landowners and to satisfy the requirement of the Town’s Planning Board” (emphasis added).
Judgment affirmed.
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The judge made “findings of fact” in this summary judgment case. All the material findings to which we refer relate to documents of record that are not disputed by the plaintiff.
Now called a “judgment of confirmation and registration.” See G. L. c. 185, § 45.
“Confirmation [proceedings, without registration, in the Land Court, see G. L. c. 185, § 56A,] provided the plaintiff with an in rem decree of the court that title is in the plaintiff’s name as of a certain date according to an accompanying plan subject to encumbrances listed. The land does not move over to the registered side of the registry. It remains on the recorded side.” Crocker’s Notes on Common Forms, § 1106, at 783 (8th ed. 1995).
The town did not acquire the registered parcel that abuts Pine Hill Road until 1986, as noted infra. The record does not disclose the rationale for service on the town in 1980 regarding the confirmation proceedings. The defendant’s brief provides no explanation for such service. The brief filed by the town suggests that notice to the town is required if there were any question of the confirmation proceedings affecting a public way. See G. L. 185, § 39. Since Pine Hill Road intersected with Discovery Hill Road, a public way, notice to the town may have been required. We express no opinion on whether notice to the town was required by § 39.
The third parcel is not affected by this action, and we make no further mention of it.
The defendant’s brief notes that a “modified version” of the petition plan became the “confirmation plan.” The brief gives no record reference to what was modified.
General Laws c. 185, § 86, provides, in part, “No civil action ... or other proceeding affecting title to land . . . shall have any effect upon registered land as against persons other than the parties thereto, unless a [qualifying] memorandum ... is filed and registered.”
The defendant also argues that the decree in the registration proceedings did not “define the boundaries” of Pine Hill Road. In fact, the decree left undetermined “the edge of upland and Pine Hill Road.” It did not leave undetermined the width of Pine Hill Road. The decree plan determined that width to be twelve feet. See Appendix A.