Bradley v. Haven
This text of 94 N.E. 268 (Bradley v. Haven) 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.
Opinion
This is a bill to compel the specific performance of a contract alleged to have been entered into by the defendants as trustees, with the plaintiff, for the sale and conveyance by them to him of a tract of land in Beverly, and also of the fee in certain private roads or rights of ways. There was a decree dismissing the bill with costs, and the plaintiff appealed. The evidence is all before us.
As the result of previous negotiations and interviews between the plaintiff and one Boardman who was, as the single justice
But we also think that there was no sufficient memorandum in writing to bring the case within the statute of frauds. The single justice found that the tract known as “ the marsh ” was ascertainable and was commonly known by that name. But he found in effect that while it was possible to ascertain by oral evidence what was meant by the “ rights of way ” referred to, it was not possible to ascertain in any other way what was meant by that phrase. He also found that “ no rights of way had become so connected with the marsh as to have acquired a definite meaning,” and that “ this language was not employed by the parties to designate rights of way in a technical sense, but to indicate the fee of certain land outside the marsh subject to rights of passage owned by other people.” These findings were well warranted by the evidence, and it follows that while the description of the marsh land as “ the marsh ” would have been sufficient to warrant a decree in the plaintiff’s favor if the trade had been confined to that, there is no sufficient memorandum in regard to the rights of way which constituted an important part of the property which the plaintiff was purchasing, and of which he seeks to compel a conveyance. The statute of frauds requires that the memorandum should “ contain a description of the land sufficient for purposes of identification, when read in the light of all the circumstances of ownership of the property by the vendor.” Harrigan v. Dodge, 200 Mass. 357, 359. Doherty v. Hill, 144 Mass. 465. Clark v. Chamberlin, 112 Mass. 19. Whelan v. Sullivan, 102 Mass. 204. In [303]*303the present case there was nothing in any memorandum by which the rights of way intended to be referred to could be identified, and it is well settled that “ Parol testimony of a previous oral agreement, which is the only means of identification referred to in the memorandum, cannot be taken into consideration to complete it.” Whelan v. Sullivan, supra, p. 206. Waterman v. Meigs, 4 Cush. 497. If the ways had constituted a part of the marsh either by reason of their use in connection with it or the configuration of the land, or for any other reason, and it was commonly so known and understood, oral evidence of those facts would have been competent because it would have tended to identify the tract described in the memorandum, and when so identified the description in the memorandum would have applied to it and would have been sufficient and would have included whatever was comprised in “ the marsh.” But as already observed, the single justice found that no rights of way had become connected with the marsh and that those words were used not in a technical sense, but to indicate the fee in lands outside the marsh. It follows that they were not included in the description of the tract as the marsh, and that there was therefore no sufficient memorandum of them in writing.
There is nothing, we think, in any of the subsequent correspondence on the part of Mr. Minot
Recree affirmed with costs.
Eugg, J.
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94 N.E. 268, 208 Mass. 300, 1911 Mass. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-haven-mass-1911.