Tuttle v. Kilroa

177 Mass. 146 | Mass. | 1900

Morton, J.

This is a bill in equity to enjoin the defendant from obstructing the plaintiff in the use of a passageway known as Goldsmith Place in the city of Boston. There was a decree for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appealed. The testimony was taken by a commissioner in accordance with Chancery Rule 35 of the Superior Court, and is before us. It includes a reference to and extracts from the deeds and instruments, which are numerous, on which the parties rely. We do not deem it necessary to consider in detail the deeds and instruments thus referred to. Several plans were also in evidence before the commissioners and have been before us. From the testimony as reported it appears that the premises now belonging to the defendant, and a portion of those belonging to the plaintiffs, formerly belonged to one Kingsbury and one Seaverns as tenants in common. Seaverns died in 1824, and commissioners were appointed to set off the widow’s dower and to make partition between Kingsbury and the Seaverns heirs, and did so. In making the partition the commissioners established and provided a common way which is described in their return as extending from the county road to the barn and barnyard, and as being twenty links wide. This is the way spoken of in the bill as Goldsmith Place. The plaintiffs derive title through both Kings-bury and the Seaverns heirs. The premises to which they derive title through the Seaverns heirs were bounded by the commissioners on one side by the common way as far as that *149extended, and then by a straight line as far as the land owned in common extended. The premises to which they derive title through Kingsbury abutted against the end of the common way, and were bounded on one side by the land set off as above to the Seaverns heirs, and constitute lot 30 on the plan. The defendant derives title through Kingsbury alone, and the premises belonging to him are.at the bottom of the way, and are bounded on one side by the way and on another side by lot 30 aforesaid. The obstruction consists of a fence built by the defendant across the end of the way. The question is whether the plaintiffs have the right to pass and repass along Goldsmith Place to its end and thence to lot 30, and across lot 30 to land set off by the commissioners to the Seaverns heirs. It seems to us clear that they have such right.

We think that the use of the common way referred to in the commissioners’ return was intended to be appurtenant to each of the tracts into which the original tract was divided by the commissioners. It is expressly provided in the return that the Seaverns heirs are to have the “ free use of the common way,” and that the way is “ to be used in common,” meaning, of course, by the parties between whom the partition is made. The way is spoken of more than once in the return as a common way, and the premises set off to the Seaverns heirs are bounded upon it as a common way. The only reasonable construction of the return is, it seems to us, that the way was intended for the convenience and benefit of the parcels into which the commissioners divided the real estate of which they were appointed to make partition. The way is spoken of as “ running from the county road to the barnyard and barnyard ” (meaning, we suppose, “barn and barnyard”), but there is nothing in the return limiting its use to passing" and repassing to and from the barn and barnyard, or preventing its use for the purpose of passing and repassing to and from each and every part of the parcels bounded or abutting upon it by the partition. Whether the effect of bounding the premises set off to the Seaverns heirs “by the common way” was to carry the fee to the centre of the way, or whether the effect of the partition was to leave the fee of the way in Kingsbury, we need not consider. If the fee was in Kingsbury, the way was subject, as already observed, to a free *150lise by the Seaverns heirs. According to the plan made by the commissioners, it would seem that the land embraced in the common way was not included in the land set off to the Seaverns heirs or to Kingsbury, but was left to lie in common. But however that may be, we can have no doubt that the right to use the way was appurtenant to each and every part of the land set off to the Seaverns heirs and to Kingsbury respectively, and has passed by mesne conveyances to the plaintiffs, so far as they are the successors in title to any part of the lands set off to the Seaverns heirs and to Kingsbury. Some of the deeds convey in express terms a right to use the common way, and in others it passes under the phrase “ privileges and appurtenances.”

The defendant contends that if the effect of the commissioners’ return was to create a right of way appurtenant to the tract of which lot 30 originally formed part, the right was extinguished so far as that tract was concerned by unity of title and possession in Goldsmith. .But assuming that Kingsbury took the fee in the common way, and that Goldsmith as successor in title to him also took the fee, he held it subject to the free use of the way by the Seaverns heirs and their successors in title, and therefore had not that full and unlimited right of disposition and power of control over the land embraced in the way necessary to a merger and extinguishment of the right of way. Ritger v. Parker, 8 Cush. 145. Reed v. West, 16 Gray, 283. Atlanta Mills v. Mason, 120 Mass. 244, 251. Crocker v. Cotting, 170 Mass. 68. Thomas v. Thomas, 2 C., M. & R. 34, 41, and note. Dority v. Dunning, 78 Maine, 381. Bull, petitioner, 15 R. I. 534.

But however that may be, in the deed from Ruthy B. Goldsmith, executrix to Norman W. Stearns, of the tract of land of which lot 30 was a part and which was derived from Kingsbury, the habendum was “ with all the rights, easements, privileges, and appurtenances to the premises belonging or used or connected therewith.” There was evidence which would justify the presiding judge in finding that the way was used in connection with the tract thus conveyed, and that the right to so use it passed to Stearns, his heirs and assigns. There was also evidence justifying the presiding judge in finding that the right *151thus acquired by Stearns passed by assignment to the plaintiff. In this view of the case it would be immaterial whether there was a merger or not. See James v. Plant, 4 A. & E. 749; Gale, Easements, (7th ed.) 82, 92.

The defendant further contends that the plaintiffs have no right to pass from the end of the way on to lot 30, and thence to premises derived by them from the Seaverns heirs. But it seems to us immaterial whether the plaintiffs go from the end of the way directly on to premises originally set off to the Seaverns heirs or reach those premises through lot 30. They have the right to use the way as a means of access to and from any part of the premises derived by them from the Seaverns heirs, and the burden upon the defendant’s premises, assuming that he owns the way adjacent to his premises, is not increased by their going from the way on to lot 30, and then on to the premises derived by them from the Seaverns heirs. The case stands altogether differently from what it would if they had no right to use the common way for the purpose of passing and repassing to and from land derived by them from the Seaverns heirs.

It might perhaps admit of question whether, even if the plaintiffs had no right to pass from the way on to lot 30 and thence on to their other land, the defendant would have a right to erect a fence across the way. But no such question has been argued, and we have not considered it. Decree affirmed.

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