Bernard v. Nantucket Boys' Club, Inc.

465 N.E.2d 236, 391 Mass. 823, 1984 Mass. LEXIS 1511
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 14, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 465 N.E.2d 236 (Bernard v. Nantucket Boys' Club, Inc.) 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
Bernard v. Nantucket Boys' Club, Inc., 465 N.E.2d 236, 391 Mass. 823, 1984 Mass. LEXIS 1511 (Mass. 1984).

Opinion

Hennessey, C.J.

The plaintiff brought this action in the Land Court alleging that the defendant had fraudulently registered land owned by the plaintiff, and seeking imposition of a constructive trust and an order requiring a conveyance to him. The Land Court judge found that the plaintiff was not the owner of the land at the time it was registered by decree of the Land Court in January, 1976, and he dismissed the complaint. Thus the judge did not reach the issue of fraud in the registration process. The plaintiff appealed. The Appeals Court summarily affirmed. 15 Mass. App. Ct. 1107 (1983). We *824 allowed the plaintiff’s application for further appellate review. We affirm.

The case arises from a conflict in the description of the property conveyed by a deed from one Maude Adams to the defendant in 1957. It is agreed that the deed conveyed the lots designated B and C on an accompanying diagram (see Figure One); the subject of the dispute is the lot designated A. If the deed conveyed lot A, then the defendant owned it prior to the registration and the plaintiff’s allegation of fraud in the registration process is of no consequence. If the deed did not convey lot A, then the plaintiff, as the sole beneficiary of the estate of Adams, owned it prior to the registration, and his allegation that the defendant fraudulently failed to notify him of the registration proceeding must be considered.

In 1955, Adams owned lots A, B, C, and 3. Lot 1 was owned by one Potter, who had purchased it from Adams’s father in the 1920’s. Lot 2 was owned by one Manuel Morris. In September, 1955, Adams conveyed lot A to one John Walsh. Approximately one month later, Walsh reconveyed lot A to *825 Adams, and Adams conveyed lot 3 to Walsh. According to his testimony, Walsh found lot A “too low” and so he decided to “trade up” to lot 3.

*824 [[Image here]]

*825 In 1957, Adams executed the deed in question. The deed grants to the defendant “[t]he land in . . . Nantucket bounded and described as follows: EASTERLY by Pleasant Street; SOUTHERLY by land of John B. Walsh et ux; WESTERLY by Sparks Avenue; NORTHERLY by other land of grantor; EASTERLY by land of Manuel Morris; NORTHERLY by land of said Morris. Said property being entirely enclosed by fences. For my title see Estates of Marcia A. Adams and Edgar Adams probated in Nantucket Probate Court.”

In 1965, lot 2 was acquired by the defendant. Adams died in 1972, leaving her entire estate to the plaintiff. In 1974, the defendant registered a tract of land comprising lots A, B, C, and 2.

The Land Court found, and an enlarged aerial photograph taken ten days before Adams’s conveyance to the defendant clearly shows, that there was a fence around lots A, B, and C, but no fence between lots A and B at the time of the conveyance. Thus there is a conflict in the description of the property conveyed. 1 If Adams intended to convey lot A, then she must have mistakenly thought that she owned lot 1, else the call, “NORTHERLY by other land of grantor,” would be meaningless. If she did not intend to convey lot A, then she was mistaken as to the existence of a fence between lots A and B.

The plaintiff contends that the title reference resolves the conflict because, while the estates of Marcia and Edgar Adams were the source of Maude Adams’s title to lots B and C, they were not, because of the conveyance to and reconveyance from Walsh, the source of her title to lot A. But, although not the immediate source of her title, the Adams estates were the original source of her title. Thus the title reference, being itself ambiguous, does not help to clarify the grantor’s intent. Cf. Sawyer v. Kendall, 10 Cush. 241, 246 (1852).

*826 The parties’ subsequent conduct does not indicate clearly that they construed the deed one way or the other. There was evidence that Adams was assessed for, and thus presumably paid, real estate taxes on lot A through 1957, and then again from 1965 until her death. (Apparently, for some unexplained reason, no one was assessed for the property from 1958 through 1964.) Payment of taxes evidences a claim of ownership. Blanchard v. Lowell, 177 Mass. 501, 505-506 (1901). Elwell v. Hinckley, 138 Mass. 225, 227 (1885). See Amee v. Boston & A. R.R., 212 Mass. 421, 424 (1912). In addition, Adams’s attorney and conservator, Wayne Holmes, testified that he drew a will, on Adams’s instructions, which, because of her death, was never executed, and which left her “Sparks Avenue property” to the defendant. 2 However, Mr. Holmes also testified that Adams told him that “she had nothing left on Sparks Avenue, that the property had gone to the Boys Club.” There was evidence that the defendant’s board of directors considered purchasing lot A in 1973, but there was also evidence that the defendant’s executive director considered lot A to be the defendant’s property in 1965. Finally, there was evidence that lot A was used and graded by the defendant in the early 1960’s, without objection by Adams, who lived nearby. See Dow v. Dow, 243 Mass. 587, 593 (1923). The Land Court judge made no findings on the parties’ subsequent construction of the deed. We think the evidence is too equivocal to permit a conclusion that the parties to the deed shared a common interpretation one way or the other.

In the absence of any satisfactory evidence of the actual intent of the parties to the deed, we must look to rules of construction. The Land Court judge adopted a rule of the Massachusetts Conveyancers’ Association that provides: “When a *827 deed contains two inconsistent descriptions of a parcel of land, the more specific will govern.” M.E. Park & D.D. Park, Real Estate Law § 241, at 313-314 (1981). He concluded that the reference to the property “being entirely enclosed by fences” is more specific than the call, “NORTHERLY by other land of grantor.” We disagree. Neither description is more specific than the other. Even if it is assumed that we would adopt the rule of preference for specificity, it has no applicability to this case.

The plaintiff urges that we adopt a rule of construction preferring natural monuments, including boundaries of other property, over artificial monuments, such as fences. See United States v. Gallas, 269 F. Supp. 141 (D. Md. 1967). Such a rule has the advantage of encouraging reliance on relatively permanent monuments and discouraging references to monuments likely to disappear. In the instant case, however, the rule might well contravene the parties’ intent. In the absence of any evidence that she either viewed the property or reviewed her property holdings generally at the time she made the deed, we cannot say whether Adams was more likely mistaken as to the existence of the fence or as to her ownership of lot 1.

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Bluebook (online)
465 N.E.2d 236, 391 Mass. 823, 1984 Mass. LEXIS 1511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernard-v-nantucket-boys-club-inc-mass-1984.