Derby v. Hall

68 Mass. 236
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 Mass. 236 (Derby v. Hall) 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
Derby v. Hall, 68 Mass. 236 (Mass. 1854).

Opinion

Bigelow, J.

Several questions, involving nice and abstruse distinctions in the law of real property, have been very ably and elaborately argued by the learned counsel in this case ; but the consideration of them, in the view which we have taken of the case, is immaterial to its decision. In the construction of deeds, when the language in which a grant is expressed is ambiguous, or capable of a double interpretation, it is necessary to look at the situation of the parties at the time of the conveyance, the circumstances attending the transaction, the purposes and objects of the conveyance, and the recitals, if any, which accompany and give significance to the operative words of the [244]*244grant. 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 286, 287. 4 Cruise Dig. (Greenl. ed.) tit. 32, c. 20, § 2, note. Adams v. Frothingham, 3 Mass. 352. By a careful consideration and application of these well settled rules of construction, we are often enabled satisfactorily to ascertain and interpret the true intent of parties in their use of words, which, without some aid beyond the mere terms of the grant, would be doubtful and obscure.

The present case seems to us to be one in which the application of these rules is eminently necessary and proper. The title of the demandants depends on the nature and quality of the estate which was conveyed by their ancestor, E. H. Derby, by the articles of agreement entered into between him and the Proprietors of the Middlesex Canal on the 5th of December 1808. The words of the grant are by no means clear and definite in the description or statement of the extent of the interest or estate, intended to be conveyed, in the land described in the instrument. The boundaries and admeasurements are sufficiently intelligible and accurate. The question is not as to the location or description of the land, but as to the kind and quality of the estate or interest in it, which it was the intent of the grantor to convey, and of the grantee to take. The terms of the grant (the land having been previously described by metes and bounds in the recital) are as follows: “ The said Derby doth hereby bargain, sell, grant, release and convey to the said proprietors the aforedescribed piece of land, lying on both sides the trunk of the said canal, for the purpose of being used and improved as appurtenant to said canal, so long as said canal shall be continued, and no longer; to have and to hold the same described and bounded land to them the said proprietors, and to their heirs and successors, so long as the same may be used and improved as appurtenant to said canal as aforesaid.” It is obvious that this was not a conveyance of an absolute estate in fee. If the words of the grant stood by themselves, without any aid in their construction to be derived from the previous recital, or the condition of the parties and the circumstances attending the transaction, it would, at most, be a conveyance of the land for a limited purpose and for a [245]*245limited time only. But in this view, supposing it to be a grant of a base or determinable fee, it would be difficult to give any force or effect to the words which limit the use and improvement of the land “ as appurtenant to said canal; ” because the land granted and described by metes and bounds includes the canal itself, as well as the land on both sides of it. To interpret the grant literally, therefore, it would be necessary to hold that the grant of the land covered by the canal, or composing its trunk, was to be appurtenant to itself, which would be manifestly absurd; and yet this phrase, “ appurtenant to said canal,” is used apparently by design; for it is repeated in the habendum. Nor can it be held, that this clause was intended to apply only to the land lying on the sides of the canal, exclusive of the trunk of the canal itself; because, on the theory that the instrument conveys a limited fee in the premises described, this would be to hold that a part of land, conveyed by one entire description, was made appurtenant to the remainder of the land included in the same description, without words indicating such an intent.. If therefore full force and effect is given to all the terms in which the grant is expressed, it is difficult, if not impracticable, to put an intelligible and consistent interpretation upon them, unless they can be read in the light of surrounding circumstances, and with reference to the purposes and objects to effect which this grant was made. But with these aids in the construction of the instrument, there can be little doubt as to its legitimate interpretation.

The Proprietors of the Middlesex Canal, for the purpose of the construction and maintenance of water communication between the seaboard and the interior of this state, were empowered by their act of incorporation, (St. 1793, c. 21,) and several acts in addition thereto, (Sts. 1794, c. 67 ; 1798, c. 16 ; 1802, c. 98,) to take .and appropriate “ the property of private persons, as in the case of highways, for the public use; ” and provision was made in the said acts for the mode of effecting this appropriation, and the assessment of damages thereby occasioned to private property. Under this power, the corporation, by taking land for a public use, would acquire no other [246]*246interest or title than that which was necessary to enable them to construct and maintain their canal; which, on familiar and well settled principles, would be only a right of way or easement in the soil, the fee still remaining in the original owner. Perley v. Chandler, 6 Mass. 454. Harrington v. County Commissioners, 22 Pick. 266.

By reference to the recital in the articles of agreement between Derby and the proprietors of the canal, which precedes the grant in question, it appears that the corporation had taken, under the authority conferred upon them by statute, the same parcel of land which is the subject of the grant, and that damages for such taking had been assessed at the sum of two thousand six hundred and eighty dollars. It also appears that the consideration of the grant was the same as the sum assessed as damages for such taking.

Now, bearing in mind the situation and relation of the parties at the time of the grant; that Derby was then the owner' in fee of a large tract of land ; that the proprietors were empowered to take, and had actually taken, by the right of eminent domain, a certain portion of it, which had thereby become condemned to a public servitude; that an easement or right of way was all the estate or interest in the land, which it was necessary for the proprietors to acquire and hold, in order to construct and maintain their canal; that damages for such taking had been assessed at a certain sum ; and that the grant was made in consideration of the same sum at which damages for the taking had been assessed under the statute ; we think it hardly admits of a doubt, that it was the intention of the parties that the corporation should take by the grant no other or greater estate or interest in the land, than that which, they would have acquired, if their title had been consummated by a return of the assessment of damages, according to the provisions of the statute, instead of by the grant in question from the owner of the soil. The effect, therefore, of the instrument as a whole is this; the corporation had taken, pursuant to the statute, an easement in the soil, for which a specific sum in damages had been assessed to the owner; this precise sum was received [247]

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Bluebook (online)
68 Mass. 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derby-v-hall-mass-1854.