Triangle Center, Inc. (Triangle), appeals from the Land Court judgment denying its prayer to enjoin the Department of Public Works (DPW) from discharging water from a State highway onto Triangle’s land. The DPW cross appeals, asserting that the Land Court erred in ruling that the DPW’s claimed drainage easement was extinguished by G. L. c. 185, § 45. Because we conclude that the DPW never had a drainage easement, we do not consider whether such an easement was extinguished. We reverse the judgment and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
We take the following facts from the judge’s findings. In 1936, the DPW took a section of highway named Plain Street on behalf of the town of Marshfield. The DPW installed a drainage system wholly within the highway bounds, consisting of a headwall and pipe, which seasonally discharges water onto Triangle’s land. The owner in 1936, a commercial florist, did not object to the periodic flooding. No easement was recorded.
In 1941, the DPW laid out and took charge of the relevant section of roadway as a State highway. In 1945, the florist conveyed the property to James A. Logue and his wife. Shortly thereafter and continuing from time to time until 1970, Logue and business associates conferred with DPW representatives about solving the drainage problem. Local DPW representatives originally assured Logue that efforts would be made to rectify the situation. Since 1967, however, the district highway engineer has claimed that the DPW acquired “prescriptive rights” to discharge the water onto Triangle’s land. In 1966, Logue conveyed title to the land to Triangle, of which he is now the sole stockholder.
The question of drainage rights remained dormant from the time of the decree until February, 1980, when the DPW again claimed prescriptive rights. This complaint followed.
General Laws c. 185, created a system of land registration designed to provide certainty in real estate titles. Section 45 of G. L. c. 185, as appearing in St. 1981, c. 658, § 25, gives finality to registration decrees subject “to the right of any person deprived of land, or of any estate or interest therein, by a judgment of registration obtained by fraud to file a complaint for review within one year after the entry of the judgment, provided no innocent purchaser for value has acquired an interest.” We have held in State St. Bank & Trust Co. v. Beale,
The DPW аrgues that Triangle obtained its decree by fraud within the ambit of these holdings, and that its drainage rights survive that decree. The trial judge concluded
There was no taking in pais. Although the DPW may have a common law right to discharge surface water onto Triangle’s property, the exercise of this right would not constitute a taking in pais, and neither such a right nor its exercise would constitute an “encumbrance” оn Triangle’s land within the meaning of G. L. c. 185, § 46. Therefore, we need not consider the issues raised by the allegation of fraud.
1. Taking in pais. The DPW argues that by installing a drainage system in conjunction with laying out a State high-' way, and by discharging water onto Triangle’s land, it effected a taking in pais.
2. Common law right of drainage. The Land Court denied Triangle injunctive relief by relying on the rule expressed in Holleran v. Boston,
The concurring opinion in Tucker v. Badoian,
The government’s right, expressed in Holleran, supra, and Turner, supra, to divert surface water from public ways onto neighboring property, is also rigid and anarchic.
The question whether the DPW’s drainage of water onto Triangle’s land is actionable is in substance no different from the question whether the DPW’s use constitutes a private nuisance. See Tucker, supra at 917 (Kaplan, J., concurring). Several other States have explicitly applied the doctrine of private nuisance in assessing the reasonableness of draining surface water off public land. See Reid v. Gwinnett County,
Public safety requires the drainage of surface waters from highways. However, it is unreasonable to impose on private individuals a disproportionate share of the cost of this public benefit. In nuisance actions against private defendants it is relevant, although not decisive, to compare the cost to the defendant of an injunctive remedy with the damage to the plaintiff. See Kasper v. H.P. Hood & Sons,
Our decision is consistent with those of sevеral other States. In Klutey, supra, at 767, 771, the court held that injunctive relief against drainage from a road was properly
3. Effect of registration on the Commonwealth’s right to drain. General Laws c. 185, § 46, provides that a registration decree renders title “free from all encumbrances” except those noted on the certificate and certain others not material here (emphasis added). We must determine whether either the Commonwealth’s common law right to drain surface water onto neighboring land, or the exercise of that right, constitutes an “encumbrance” on that land within the meaning of § 46. If either does, the right is extinguished as a result of not having been noted on the registration certificate.
Excluding the Commonwealth’s drainage right from the definition оf “encumbrance” is consistent with the purposes of land registration. Registration is not meant to make land more valuable by extinguishing nontitleholders’ rights in it; it is intended to make title more marketable by making title more certain. Deacy v. Berberian,
So ordered.
Notes
Notice was required by G. L. c. 185, §§ 38 and 39.
The DPW does not argue on appeal that it acquired any rights by prescription as distinguished from acquisition by a taking in pais.
Cases such as Holleran v. Boston,
On appeal, Triangle seeks only injunctive relief against future drainage, not money damages for past drainage. At least in this circumstance, -there is no injustice in applying this rule to drainage by the Commonwealth that has occurred for a long time. We have noted that through the eminent domain power, the Commonwealth can limit its cost to the damage to the adjoining landowner, and that it is unreasonable for the Commonwealth to impose on that landowner a disproportionate share of the cost of the public benefit. The longevity of the drainage does not make the Commonwealth’s present drainage any more reasonable than it would be if it had just begun.
Our decision today is restricted to drainage by the government. It should not be read to affect the reasonable use analysis applied to disputes between private landowners.
Citing Leeds v. Wheeler,
