Hamlen v. Sorkin

146 N.E. 265, 251 Mass. 143, 1925 Mass. LEXIS 978
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 146 N.E. 265 (Hamlen v. Sorkin) 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
Hamlen v. Sorkin, 146 N.E. 265, 251 Mass. 143, 1925 Mass. LEXIS 978 (Mass. 1925).

Opinion

Sandebson, J.

This is a bill in equity to enforce a restriction on land of the defendant Sorkin by enjoining him from erecting a building thereon within twenty-five feet of the exterior line of Fresh Pond Parkway. The trial court, after hearing, made findings of fact, entered an order that the bill be dismissed with costs, and reserved and reported the case to this court upon the pleadings, findings of fact, and order for a decree. ■

The plaintiffs own land abutting on Fresh Pond Parkway, in Cambridge, sub j ect to certain restrictions. The defendant Sorkin has since April, 1924, owned land subject to the same restrictions, bounded in part on Fresh Pond Parkway and in part on a way called Hawthorne Street. The other defendants are interested in the real estate of Sorkin as mortgagees of record. The defendant Sorkin will be referred to as the defendant.

The restrictions to which the defendant’s land is subject are contained in a deed from Daniel P. and Mary E. Sullivan to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, dated May 6,1902. [148]*148By an instrument of taking, dated September 27, 1899, the Metropolitan Park Commission, acting under St. 1894, c. 288, and St. 1895, c. 450, took a parcel of land extending from Brattle Street to Huron Avenue, in the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and for its benefit, for the purpose of laying out and establishing the Fresh Pond Parkway. Included therein was a part of the way called Hawthorne Street. The lot formerly owned by the Sullivans and the ■part of it which is now owned by the defendant, as well as some of the boundary lines of the taking, are shown on the printed plan which is a reproduction, in part, of the one accompanying the instrument of taking. The Commonwealth paid the several owners their damages for the taking, and took from them deeds of the land included in the taking and releases of their claims for damages. In all of these deeds uniform restrictions were contained applying to the remaining land of the grantors abutting on said parkway and lying within one hundred feet from the line thereof. By means of these and other conveyances, similar restrictions were imposed upon all land abutting on the parkway and to •a distance of one hundred feet therefrom, between Brattle Street and Huron Avenue, and were a part of a general plan or scheme for uniform restrictions against building within twenty-five feet of the parkway, and the easement of these restrictions was appurtenant to the several premises of the plaintiffs.

Before the taking the easterly boundary of the land owned by Daniel P. and Mary E. Sullivan was the way called Hawthorne Street, which will be referred to in this opinion as Hawthorne Street. This street at the time of the taking was laid out on a plan filed in the Registry of Deeds, but was not constructed. In August, 1924, the street north of the part where the roadway and walk of the parkway were actually built, remained rough and uneven, unwrought for ■travel, although vehicles could pass over it. Recently, Hawthorne Street between the northerly limits of the Commonwealth’s taking and Huron Avenue has been laid out •as a public way by the city authorities. The part of the Sullivan lot southerly of the line running, through it, as [149]*149■shown on the plan, was taken by the Commonwealth and later Daniel P. and Mary E. Sullivan, by their deed herein-before referred to, released their interest therein to the Commonwealth “ Together with all that portion of the fee and soil of said Hawthorne Street included within said Taking lying adjacent to the parcel above described and adjacent to our said remaining land which we may lawfully convey.” The part of the Sullivan lot northerly of the line of the taking is now owned by the defendant. The restriction in this deed from the Sullivans to the Commonwealth material to this case is in these terms: “No budding or part thereof shall be erected, placed or maintained upon said premises within twenty five feet from the exterior line of said parkway, provided, however, that the steps to it may project into said reserved space.” In said deed the Commonwealth agreed to construct along the boundary line of said parkway within said parcel of land (meaning the parcel described in the deed from the Sullivans) a roadway and walk to which the grantors, their heirs and assigns shall have free access, with the right to use the same for the purposes of a way. The restriction was by the terms of the deed to continue in force so long as such roadway and walk shall be maintained by the Commonwealth, and the grantors, their heirs and assigns shall have free access thereto and liberty to use the same for the purposes of a way. The northerly line of the taking as it passed through the Sullivans’ land curved to the north by a line thirty-six and seventy-eight hundredths feet in length into Hawthorne Street and then continued in a northerly direction on the line between the land of the Sullivans and Hawthorne Street for a distance of ninety-six and seventy-two •hundredths feet, so that Hawthorne Street where the Sullivans’ land bounded on it was taken for a distance of ninety-six and seventy-two hundredths feet northerly from the end of the .curve at the-southeasterly corner of the Sullivans’ remaining land, now owned by the defendant. The plan shows that the taking on the easterly side of Hawthorne Street opposite the defendant’s land included private land beyond the limits of Hawthorne Street. This land opposite that of the defendant, and bounding on the fine which [150]*150marked the limits of the taking, was made subject to a restriction against building in the same terms as that above quoted.

Shortly after the taking the Commonwealth, in accordance with the covenant in the deed, constructed and has since maintained along the boundary line of the parkway, within the limits of the parcel of land described in the deed from the Sullivans, a roadway and walk adjacent to the defendant’s lot and bounding it on the south, to which the grantors and the defendant have had free access with the right to use the same for the purposes of a way. At Hawthorne Street, it has constructed its roadway and walk as far as a line drawn across that street at the northerly end of the curve measuring thirty-six and seventy-eight hundredths feet at the southeasterly corner of the defendant’s land, but it has not constructed a roadway and walk within the limits of the taking on Hawthorne Street, northerly of this line, namely, along that portion of Hawthorne Street on which the defendant’s land bounds for ninety-six and seventy-two hundredths feet. This part of the land taken has not been planted with trees and cared for, as has the parkway over which the roadway and walks were constructed.

The defendant is intending to build and has begun excavating for a brick twenty-five apartment house within twenty-five feet of the line of the taking on that portion of Hawthorne Street where it extends northerly on the defendant’s land ninety-six and seventy-two hundredths feet; and he contends that the restriction does not apply to this part of his land. This building if erected will be more than twenty-five feet from the line of the parkway in the part where the roadway and walk have been constructed. The court, in making the order that the bill be dismissed, construed the twenty-five-foot restriction as not applicable to the part of the defendant’s land which bounds on that part of Hawthorne Street within the limits of the taking not wrought for travel as part of the roadway of said parkway.

A parkway or boulevard is a broad thoroughfare beautified with trees and turf. It is intended for recreation and street purposes. In

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 N.E. 265, 251 Mass. 143, 1925 Mass. LEXIS 978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamlen-v-sorkin-mass-1925.