68 Mass. 271 | Mass. | 1854
The instructions which the sheriff was requested by the respondents to give to the jury, as to the proper construction and effect of the deed from Tufts to Ferrin, should have been adopted. They were material to the question in controversy between the parties. If the land taken for the public highway was subject to no incumbrance, the petitioner was entitled to recover damages to its full value; but otherwise, only to the amount of what it was worth, subject to the incumbrance. In the deed to Ferrin, the land conveyed to him is, in part, described as “beginning at Bunker Hill Street, on a passage way two rods wide, which is to be laid out between the premises and land of Nathan Adams; thence on said contemplated passage way fifteen rods and three and a half links.” When a grantor conveys land, bounding it on a way or street, he and his heirs are estopped to deny that there is such a street or way. This is not descriptive merely, but an implied covenant of the existence of the way. It was so expressly determined in
A new trial was had before the sheriff, and resulted in a verdict of $1,000 for the petitioner.