Atkins v. Bordman

43 Mass. 457
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 Mass. 457 (Atkins v. Bordman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkins v. Bordman, 43 Mass. 457 (Mass. 1841).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This cause, or rather several causes growing out of the same subject of controversy, have long been before the court ; and it is to be regretted that all points of dispute, in regard to the relative rights of the parties, have not yet been adjusted. Several questions have heretofore been decided, and the parties have acquiesced in the decisions, and adjusted their buildings in conformity with them. 20 Pick. 291.

The main question, which now remains for consideration, between these parties, is, whether the defendants had a right to erect a building over the passage way which, it is conceded, the plaintiff has a right to have, use and enjoy, on the southerly side of the defendants’ land. It appears that heretofore both of these tenements belonged to one person, and of course neither estate was then subject to any easement for the benefit of the other ; because the owner, as the exclusive proprietor, might build upon any part, or use and appropriate any and every part of the estate at his own pleasure, as his own sense of his interest and convenience might dictate. It is obvious, that so long as two tenements remain the estate of the same owner, no right of easement can be created by use, however long continued; because such use cannot be adverse. Whenever therefore such proprietor conveys away part of the estate so situated, he may create, annex, and convey with the estate granted, such rights of way over his other estate retained, or other easements therein, [463]*463as he may think fit; and also he may reserve out of the estate granted, and annex to his own estate retained, such easements as he may deem proper. And the acceptance of the deed by the grantee, whilst it gives him the benefit of the easements granted, subjects the granted estate, both in his own hands, and in those of all others who may come in under him, to the easements reserved. It stands, therefore, upon the ground of convention, between those who have a disposing power.

There are cases, indeed, in which it is held, that long use may be given in evidence to establish the right of the grantee, in such case, to easements in and over the estate of the grantor ; but on a very different principle from that on which prescription or pre sumed grant is founded. The right claimed depends on grant; but the question often arises, from the ambiguity, brevity, or uncertainty of the descriptive words used, what was the extent of such grant ; in other words, what was the intention of the parties in making and accepting the grant. In ascertaining this intent, several rules of exposition are adopted, founded upon experience, to enable courts to determine, or to approximate to such meaning and intent. It is a rule, that the language of a conveyance shall be construed most strongly against the grantor; because it is his act, and the language that of his choice or dictation. Again ; a grant being made for a valuable consideration, it shall be presumed that the grantor intended to convey, and the grantee expected to receive, the full benefit of it, and therefore that the grantor not only conveyed the thing specifically described, but all other things, so far as it was in his power to pass them, which were necessary to the enjoyment of the thing granted. Thus the grant of a mill actually driven by water, though not described as a water-mill in the deed, carries with it a right to the stream which supplies the mill, although it comes to the mill wholly through other land of the grantor. He cannot divert it, and thus derogate from the beneficial effect of his grant. The grant of a messuage or tract of land, with no access to it but over other land of the grantor, is by implication a tacit grant-of a convenient right of way to it over such other iand. But there is another rule in ascertaining the meaning of [464]*464parties where the deed is silent, or the language defective or ambiguous, and one to which we more particularly before alluded ; .and it is this : that it is competent, in order to show what the parties probably meant, where the language is not fully clear and unambiguous, to prove the local position, the relative situation of the estate granted, that of the estate reserved, and also the manner in which the grantor himself had used it, when owner of the whole. Such evidence of use of particular ways over one estate, in the occupation and enjoyment of the other, may tend to show what was necessary, or useful and convenient in this respect, and so considered by him who had a power to use both as he pleased, and therefore tends to show what, by necessary or reasonable implication, was intended. Tt is very clear that a grantor, by unequivocal words, may convey one estate by definite description, and create and annex thereto an easement in his own other land. This may also be done by necessary or reasonable implication, if the intent so to do can be inferred. Thus, if one grants an estate, with all the privileges and appurtenances, and there be a right of way over a third person’s estate, that right of way passes. Indeed, such right of way passes as incident, though <£ appurteiíances ” are not expressed. Kent v. Waite, 10 Pick. 138. But if there be no such right of way, which may be legally and technically “ appurtenant,” but the grantor has commonly used a way thereto over his other land ; in order to give effect to the manifest intent, it may be construed to pass a right over such land, not as an appurtenance before existing, but as an easement created by the deed itself, and annexed to the estate granted. So if one grant an estate, with the ways and other easements actually used and enjoyed therewith, evidence aliunde, by parol or otherwise, may be given to prove that a particular way was then in use by the grantor ; and then it is held to pass as parcel of the estate conveyed. White v. Crawford, 10 Mass. 183. Story v. Odin, 12 Mass. 157. Murris v. Edgington, 3 Taunt. 24. United States v. Appleton, 1 Sumner, 492. Salisbury v. Andrews, 19 Pick. 250. This view ¡nay perhaps tend to reconcile authorities which may seem conflicting, tending on the one side to show that no length [465]*465of time, or constancy of use, can create an easement over one estate for the benefit of another, whilst there is unity of title in one owner — and on the other, that long use by the grantor may be evidence of title to the easement in the grantee. The long and constant use of a way over the land of another, without interruption or objection, is evidence of right, because it is not to be presumed that an owner would permit such use without right. But the long and frequent use of a way over a part of one’s own estate, as conducive to the useful and convenient occupation of another part, tends to show that it was necessary or beneficial ; and, therefore, if there be no other way, or if there be any words describing or alluding to a way actually used, or when ways “ appurtenant ” are expressed, and in fact there is no way technically appurtenant, such previous use by the owner may be available to give effect to the presumption that it was intended that such right of way should pass, as parcel of, or incident to, the estate granted.

With this view of the law before us, we are to look at the deed by which the defendants’ estate was granted by the plaintiff’s predecessor, to ascertain the nature and extent of the plaintiff’s easements, for a disturbance of which, this action is brought.

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Bluebook (online)
43 Mass. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkins-v-bordman-mass-1841.