Hom v. Wong

142 N.E.2d 402, 336 Mass. 81, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 591
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 10, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 142 N.E.2d 402 (Hom v. Wong) 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
Hom v. Wong, 142 N.E.2d 402, 336 Mass. 81, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 591 (Mass. 1957).

Opinion

Whittemobe, J.

The plaintiffs Klein, Berler and Horn own respectively lots B, C, and D so called for our purposes in a block of buildings which we take to be apartment houses1 at the southeast corner of Alton Place and Harvard Street in Brookline. The houses on lots A through F front on Alton Place which runs easterly from Harvard Street. Lot G and the house thereon, on the corner, and lots H through K, and the houses thereon, fronting on Harvard Street, do not concern us.

The bills of complaint aver a right of way for all purposes over lot L so called. Lot L is comprised of an open area in the rear of lots A through F, G and K and a panhandle about twenty-five feet wide extending from Alton Place along the easterly side of lot A. The plaintiffs’ brief discloses that they seek to establish the right to use lot L as a driveway for driving automobiles onto the rear yards of their respective lots.

The cases were referred to a master and come here on the plaintiffs’ appeals from final decrees which dismissed the bills of complaint, and, pursuant to a prayer in the answers for such relief, enjoined the plaintiffs and those claiming under them, in perpetuity, from using lot L for any purpose excepting, however, the use of a foot passageway which is therein described. The plaintiffs filed objections to the report which stand as exceptions (Rule 90 of the Superior Court p.954Q) and contend as specified in the objections that the conclusions of the master were inconsistent with subsidiary findings. There was no error.

[83]*83A concrete foot passageway runs on lot L along the easterly side of lot A to the rear of the building on lot A, then it turns and runs westerly along and close to the rear walls of the buildings on lots A through F, setting them off from their rear yards. There are in each chain of title references to a passageway from Alton Place to the rear of the lots A to K as shown on a plan. We conclude from the plan in evidence that this passageway of record, in its course from Alton Place along the easterly line of lot A, is coincident with the existing passageway. But the record passageway as shown on the plan continues along the remainder of the easterly line of lot A and the southerly line of lots A through F rather than along the rear of the buildings on these lots, as does the existing passageway. Nothing in these cases turns on this difference of location.

The original tract was subdivided in 1916. From 1916 to 1945 lots B, C, D, and L were in common ownership but they were subject to separate mortgages from and after dates as follows: lot B, June 1, 1916; lot D, October 26, 1916; lot L, November 2, 1916; lot C, August 18, 1919. Foreclosures of mortgages occurred on dates as follows: lot B, May 28, 1945; lot C, on or about April 23, 1946; lot D, June 25, 1948; lot L, May 13, 1949. The plaintiffs and the defendants take title by mesne conveyances which followed the foreclosures.

The buildings on the lots were completed in 1917. The master found that from 1917 to the beginning of these suits “lot L has been used by rubbish and garbage trucks of the town of Brookline, by various tradespeople, viz., milkmen, Iaundrymen, furniture movers, plumbers, carpenters, painters and deliverymen for the benefit of the occupants of lots A to F, and has also been used as a short cut by other persons walking from Harvard Street to Alton Place. These uses were begun with the permission of the original owners ... of all the lots A to L .... There has been neither protest nor express permission to those persons who from 1917 . . . have used the driveway on lot L.” Upon recommittal the master “based upon the [84]*84facts stated in my original report . . . [found and reported] as follows: Upon the testimony adduced at the hearing before me, I find that the respondents’ lot is not a public way and that the petitioners acquired no easement over it by express or implied grant, except for a limited passageway right as appears on plan of land, exhibit 4. I further find that neither the petitioners nor their predecessors in title have used or passed over the land of the respondents openly, adversely, and under a claim of right for more than twenty years.”

In the view we take of the cases it is not necessary to determine whether all the concluding findings can be deemed to be based only on subsidiary facts found. We assume for our decision that they are so based.

From 1917 to July, 1948, the fine between lot L and lots A through F was marked by shrubbery and poplar trees which formed the easterly and southerly landscaped background for the common lawn-garden area into which the back yards of lots A through F were merged in this period. This garden area was further defined on its long north side by a hedge and flower bed adjacent to the foot passageway, and by shrubs at the west end.

In 1948, the poplar trees were removed. In 1949 a chain link fence about three and one half feet high was erected enclosing the back yard of lot D. In 1949 or 1950 a similar fence was erected enclosing the back yard of lot B. In 1954 the then owner of lot L, not the defendants, placed a curbing of substantial wooden beams, bolted to the concrete, along the boundary line where the poplar trees had stood. The plaintiff Berler removed a portion of the beam adjacent to his lot, C, in 1955. The plaintiff Klein, joint owner of lot B, caused a portion of the beam adjacent to his lot to be removed in 1955.

There are twenty-two stalls for garages on lot L, along its southerly side. It does not appear when they were built. The exposed surface of the lot is covered with concrete.

1. There is no basis for a claim of an implied grant of the claimed easement. The mortgages on lots B and D and L [85]*85were given (1916) before the buildings were completed (1917) and there is no finding suggesting any use of lot L for the benefit of any lots prior to 1917. While the mortgage on lot C was given in 1919, after use of lot L by tradespeople had begun, the title to lot L is determined by the 1916 mortgage of that lot and there was of course at that time no open and continuous use of one parcel for the benefit of the other,” from which an intention to create an easement on the severance of full legal and equitable title could be implied. See Mt. Holyoke Realty Corp. v. Holyoke Realty Corp. 284 Mass. 100, 108; Hurley v. Guzzi, 328 Mass. 293, 295; Sorel v. Boisjolie, 330 Mass. 513, 516. There would be little basis, in any event, for implying an easement in view of the express creation in the original mortgage deeds of an easement in the foot passageway as shown on the plan and the absence of evidence that at that time such was not fully reasonable access to the rear of the buildings. Joyce v. Devaney, 322 Mass. 544. Krinsky v. Hoffman, 326 Mass. 683, 687-689.

2. There is nothing in the facts to show the use of lot L, for the prescriptive period, in the way which the plaintiffs now claim the right to use it and no use sufficient to support the new use claimed. Fortier v. H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc. 307 Mass. 292, 299, and cases cited. See Swenson v. Marino, 306 Mass. 582, 583, 586. No use is found of lot L by the owners or occupants of lots B, C, and D. No access to the rear of these lots across the line between each of lots B, C, and D and lot L is found or inferable from the findings.1

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Bluebook (online)
142 N.E.2d 402, 336 Mass. 81, 1957 Mass. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hom-v-wong-mass-1957.