Cutter, J.
This bill in equity to determine rights in Sandy Beach Reservation (the beach) in Marblehead was before this court in
Butler
v.
Haley Greystone Corp.
347 Mass. 478 (the first
Butler
case). Because of uncertainties in the Land Court judge’s findings upon a long, confusing record (1158 pages of testimony, 316 exhibits,
and 111 printed pages of proceedings), the decree was reversed and “ [t]he case . . . [was] remanded to the Land Court for further proceedings consistent with the opinion.”
Further testimony has been taken and twenty-three additional exhibits have been received. The Land Court judge, who properly treated the whole record (including that before this court in the first
Butler
case) as before him, has made additional findings and rulings. The present appeal by Haley Greystone Corporation (H-G) is from a new final decree.
We need not restate in detail the facts described in the first
Butler
case, 347 Mass. 478. The principal question is whether persons, other than owners in Section No. 1, now have or may be given the right to use the beach for recreation.
1. In the first
Butler
case, upon the findings and record then before the court, views were expressed for the guidance. of the Land Court on remand. The Land Court judge’s new findings upon the whole record in some degree clarify the situation, which we reexamine to determine whether there is basis for the new final decree.
It was open to the trial judge to hold such further hearings and to make such findings and rulings as might be required by the record as expanded. He was not required by our opinion or rescript in the first
Butler
case to limit the range of his further inquiry. See
Long
v.
George,
296 Mass. 574, 577;
Fisher
v.
MacDonald,
335 Mass. 429, 431. See also
Woodworth
v.
Woodworth,
273 Mass. 402, 406-408.
2. In his new findings, the Land Court judge first men-
tians an ambiguous provision of the 1931 registration decree concerning the beach,
upon which we commented in the first
Butler
case, 347 Mass. 478, 482, 484. He now states
SIMPLIFIED SKETCH MAP OF SECTION NO. 1 BASED ON EXHIBIT 18
(Plan Book 54, Plan 60, recorded July 5, 1928). [Section No. 2 is not shown on the recorded plans in evidence.]
that H-Gr admitted in its answer that “there is appurtenant to each lot in Section No. 1” as shown on certain substantially similar recorded plans of Section No. 1, filed from 1926 to 1928, “the right to use” the beach. H-Gr’s statement (par. 10 of its answer, “that . . . [H-Gr] avers that rights to Sandy Beach Reservation are for the benefit of both Section [No.] 1 and Section [No.] 2”) may be somewhat less explicit than the judge suggests. Nevertheless, H-Gr’s transfer certificate of title (No. 28249) refers specifically to a substantial number of deeds from Sterling, given in 1931 and thereafter,
creating recreation easements over the beach for the benefit of particular lots in Section No. 1.
These deeds mentioned in H-Gr’s 1959 certificate of title, taken together, sufficiently refer to a comprehensive scheme for the development of Section No. 1 (see
Sterling Realty Co.
v.
Tredennick,
319 Mass. 153, 156) and for granting beach rights to purchasers of each of the lots in Section No. 1. H-Gr, from the 1959 transfer certificate of title, received notice of the easements of the lot holders in Section No. 1, and was charged with notice of various deeds which showed the general development scheme affecting Section No. 1 and referred to the recorded plans of that development.
We hold that (a) the ambiguous provisions (fn. 3) both of the 1931 decree and of H-Gr’s 1959 certificate
of title, and (b) the deeds noted on the 1959 certificate,
subjected the beach to recreation easements in favor at least of (a) all Sterling’s pre-1931 grantees of lots in Section No. 1, and (b) all grantees of lots in Section No. 1 under later deeds' from Sterling when duly recorded and noted upon the. certificate of title.
• 3. By the time the Procters (who received a deed to land in Section No. 2 from Sterling, see fn. 2, in.1955) and H-G in 1959 took title to land in Section No. 2, the following facts lent support to the plaintiffs’ view that the beach easements were for the exclusive benefit of Section No. 1 lots, (a) The beach was part of the first parcel acquired by Sterling from one Furlong (fn. 3) and had no necessary connection with the second parcel, (b) Three plans of Section No. 1 had been recorded, each, showing the beach as part of Section No. 1. No such plan referred in any way to Section No. 2 or indicated that the general scheme related to Section No. 2. (c) Deeds from Sterling of all the lots in Section No. 1 had been recorded (although not all were noted-on'H-G’s beach title certificate), each containing substantially the same beach easement and substantially the same restrictions, (d) Certain restrictions in deeds from Sterling of lots in Section No. 1 were expressed as binding only the land (wholly in Section No. 1) shown on the recorded plan. Where it was intended that rights should be reserved (e.g. easements for construction in roads) for the benefit of Section No. 2, -the reservation was stated specifically. (e.) Section No. 2 was a considerable distance from the beach reservation and. separated from it by the Section No..-1 land.
(f.) The only conveyance by Sterling of. Sec-
tian No. 2 land prior to the 1955 sale to the Procters expressly excluded that Section No. 2 parcel from any right to use the beach, (g) There is no showing that, during the thirty years of Sterling’s ownership (1925-1955), there was any recorded plan of a proposed development of Section No. 2.* ******
(h) The Sterling deeds showed a unified scheme of restrictions (see
Ward
v.
Prudential Ins. Co.
299 Mass. 559, 561-564; see also
Snow
v.
Van Dam,
291 Mass. 477, 481-486) affecting only Section No. 1, and for the benefit only of the lots in Section No. 1, thus affording basis for interpreting the easements expressed in the same deeds as intended to be for the benefit only of the same parcels.
Sterling in its deeds of lots in Section No. 1 might have stated more clearly (cf.
American Tel. & Tel. Co. of Mass.
v.
McDonald,
273 Mass. 324, 325-326; cf. also
Baseball Publishing Co.
v.
Bruton,
302 Mass.
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Cutter, J.
This bill in equity to determine rights in Sandy Beach Reservation (the beach) in Marblehead was before this court in
Butler
v.
Haley Greystone Corp.
347 Mass. 478 (the first
Butler
case). Because of uncertainties in the Land Court judge’s findings upon a long, confusing record (1158 pages of testimony, 316 exhibits,
and 111 printed pages of proceedings), the decree was reversed and “ [t]he case . . . [was] remanded to the Land Court for further proceedings consistent with the opinion.”
Further testimony has been taken and twenty-three additional exhibits have been received. The Land Court judge, who properly treated the whole record (including that before this court in the first
Butler
case) as before him, has made additional findings and rulings. The present appeal by Haley Greystone Corporation (H-G) is from a new final decree.
We need not restate in detail the facts described in the first
Butler
case, 347 Mass. 478. The principal question is whether persons, other than owners in Section No. 1, now have or may be given the right to use the beach for recreation.
1. In the first
Butler
case, upon the findings and record then before the court, views were expressed for the guidance. of the Land Court on remand. The Land Court judge’s new findings upon the whole record in some degree clarify the situation, which we reexamine to determine whether there is basis for the new final decree.
It was open to the trial judge to hold such further hearings and to make such findings and rulings as might be required by the record as expanded. He was not required by our opinion or rescript in the first
Butler
case to limit the range of his further inquiry. See
Long
v.
George,
296 Mass. 574, 577;
Fisher
v.
MacDonald,
335 Mass. 429, 431. See also
Woodworth
v.
Woodworth,
273 Mass. 402, 406-408.
2. In his new findings, the Land Court judge first men-
tians an ambiguous provision of the 1931 registration decree concerning the beach,
upon which we commented in the first
Butler
case, 347 Mass. 478, 482, 484. He now states
SIMPLIFIED SKETCH MAP OF SECTION NO. 1 BASED ON EXHIBIT 18
(Plan Book 54, Plan 60, recorded July 5, 1928). [Section No. 2 is not shown on the recorded plans in evidence.]
that H-Gr admitted in its answer that “there is appurtenant to each lot in Section No. 1” as shown on certain substantially similar recorded plans of Section No. 1, filed from 1926 to 1928, “the right to use” the beach. H-Gr’s statement (par. 10 of its answer, “that . . . [H-Gr] avers that rights to Sandy Beach Reservation are for the benefit of both Section [No.] 1 and Section [No.] 2”) may be somewhat less explicit than the judge suggests. Nevertheless, H-Gr’s transfer certificate of title (No. 28249) refers specifically to a substantial number of deeds from Sterling, given in 1931 and thereafter,
creating recreation easements over the beach for the benefit of particular lots in Section No. 1.
These deeds mentioned in H-Gr’s 1959 certificate of title, taken together, sufficiently refer to a comprehensive scheme for the development of Section No. 1 (see
Sterling Realty Co.
v.
Tredennick,
319 Mass. 153, 156) and for granting beach rights to purchasers of each of the lots in Section No. 1. H-Gr, from the 1959 transfer certificate of title, received notice of the easements of the lot holders in Section No. 1, and was charged with notice of various deeds which showed the general development scheme affecting Section No. 1 and referred to the recorded plans of that development.
We hold that (a) the ambiguous provisions (fn. 3) both of the 1931 decree and of H-Gr’s 1959 certificate
of title, and (b) the deeds noted on the 1959 certificate,
subjected the beach to recreation easements in favor at least of (a) all Sterling’s pre-1931 grantees of lots in Section No. 1, and (b) all grantees of lots in Section No. 1 under later deeds' from Sterling when duly recorded and noted upon the. certificate of title.
• 3. By the time the Procters (who received a deed to land in Section No. 2 from Sterling, see fn. 2, in.1955) and H-G in 1959 took title to land in Section No. 2, the following facts lent support to the plaintiffs’ view that the beach easements were for the exclusive benefit of Section No. 1 lots, (a) The beach was part of the first parcel acquired by Sterling from one Furlong (fn. 3) and had no necessary connection with the second parcel, (b) Three plans of Section No. 1 had been recorded, each, showing the beach as part of Section No. 1. No such plan referred in any way to Section No. 2 or indicated that the general scheme related to Section No. 2. (c) Deeds from Sterling of all the lots in Section No. 1 had been recorded (although not all were noted-on'H-G’s beach title certificate), each containing substantially the same beach easement and substantially the same restrictions, (d) Certain restrictions in deeds from Sterling of lots in Section No. 1 were expressed as binding only the land (wholly in Section No. 1) shown on the recorded plan. Where it was intended that rights should be reserved (e.g. easements for construction in roads) for the benefit of Section No. 2, -the reservation was stated specifically. (e.) Section No. 2 was a considerable distance from the beach reservation and. separated from it by the Section No..-1 land.
(f.) The only conveyance by Sterling of. Sec-
tian No. 2 land prior to the 1955 sale to the Procters expressly excluded that Section No. 2 parcel from any right to use the beach, (g) There is no showing that, during the thirty years of Sterling’s ownership (1925-1955), there was any recorded plan of a proposed development of Section No. 2.* ******
(h) The Sterling deeds showed a unified scheme of restrictions (see
Ward
v.
Prudential Ins. Co.
299 Mass. 559, 561-564; see also
Snow
v.
Van Dam,
291 Mass. 477, 481-486) affecting only Section No. 1, and for the benefit only of the lots in Section No. 1, thus affording basis for interpreting the easements expressed in the same deeds as intended to be for the benefit only of the same parcels.
Sterling in its deeds of lots in Section No. 1 might have stated more clearly (cf.
American Tel. & Tel. Co. of Mass.
v.
McDonald,
273 Mass. 324, 325-326; cf. also
Baseball Publishing Co.
v.
Bruton,
302 Mass. 54, 57) the intention that the beach easements were to be exclusively a part of the Section No. 1 scheme and for the benefit only of Section No. 1 lots. Nevertheless, we think such an intention is apparent from the instruments adequately referred to by the title certificates, viewed in the light of the somewhat unusual background circumstances shown by the findings and evidence. See Restatement: Property, §§ 242, 483, comment d; Am. Law of Property, §§ 8.65-8.66; Powell, Real Property, §§ 404 [2], 415, esp. at pp. 508, 515. We conclude that Sterling had no power in 1955 to grant any beach rights appurtenant to land other than lots in Section No. 1. That Sterling so interpreted the situation is suggested by its express statement that no beach easement was granted by its 1947 deed of a Section No. 2 lot.
■ We have given consideration to the principles (a) that exclusive easements should be clearly expressed (see fn. 7); (b) that a “servient owner retains the use of his land for all purposes except such as are inconsistent with the right granted to the dominant owner” (see
Merry
v.
Priest,
276 Mass. 592, 600); and that doubts are to be resolved in favor of freedom of land from servitude. See
Semenway
v.
Bartevian,
321 Mass. 226, 229; Am. Law of Property, § 8.66, p. 279; Powell, Real Property, § 405, pp. 391-392. Nevertheless, we are of opinion that, by the general scheme relating to Section No. 1 of which the beach was an integral part, it was sufficiently shown that Sterling’s further rights to grant easements in the beach, after each successive conveyance of a Section No. 1 lot, were confined to such grants for the benefit only of its remaining lots in Section No. 1.
4. The final decree is affirmed.
So ordered.