Daw v. Lally
This text of 100 N.E. 1024 (Daw v. Lally) 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 an action of tort for the obstruction of an alleged prescriptive right of way claimed by the plaintiff as appurtenant to premises belonging to him in Nantucket. The plaintiff acquired title to the premises in November, 1902, from one Henry Mitchell. Mitchell’s wife, Mary Chilton Mitchell, purchased them in 1883 and devised them in fee to her husband by her will which was duly probated in March, 1902. The strip over which the right of way is claimed as appurtenant to the plaintiff’s premises was part of a tract of land formerly known as the Raymond and Ellis land, which adjoins the plaintiff’s lot on the west. The owners of this land, before 1883, surveyed and divided it into house lots and arranged for passageways and delineated the lots and ways on a plan duly recorded. One of the ways was marked on the plan “Grant Avenue” and extended from a public way, a distance of one hundred feet, to the line of the premises formerly of Mitchell, now of the plaintiff, where it terminated. The lots on the north side of this way belong to the defendant Lally and those on the south side to the defendant Brock, who acquired them from her father, George H. Brock. The right of way claimed by the plaintiff was over this. strip called Grant Avenue. “There was evidence tending to show that the ownership of Lally and Brock extended to the centre of said Grant Avenue, so-called, and that they closed said way to use as a pass [age] way on or about November 4, 1908.” This was the obstruction complained of. “The plaintiff offered evidence tending to show use of said way by the plaintiff’s predecessors in title for more than twenty years prior to the bringing of this action, as a means of access to and egress from said land now belonging to the plaintiff.” The case was heard by a [580]*580judge
' In the course of the trial the defendant Brock was permitted subject to the plaintiff’s exception to testify to a conversation which her father told her he had with Mr. Mitchell,
The defendant’s brief begins with a motion that the exceptions be dismissed for the reason that, though allowed August 15,1911, they were not entered in this court till October. But the circumstances attending the entry in this court are not before us and the motion cannot therefore be allowed.
It is manifest that if the premises had belonged to Mitchell instead of to his wife, the conversation testified to by the defendant Brock would have been admissible. Hall v. Reinherz, 192 Mass. 52. It is objected that there is nothing to show that Mitchell was acting as his wife’s agent. But there was evidence tending to show that after the conversation Mitchell had a large gate opening into Grant Avenue built in the fence which separated his wife’s land from Grant Avenue, and that the gate was used by himself and his wife and other members of the family. And from these and other circumstances
Exceptions overruled.
Jenney, J.
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100 N.E. 1024, 213 Mass. 578, 1913 Mass. LEXIS 1050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daw-v-lally-mass-1913.