Houghton v. Johnson

887 N.E.2d 1073, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 825
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 30, 2008
DocketNo. 06-P-1400
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 887 N.E.2d 1073 (Houghton v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houghton v. Johnson, 887 N.E.2d 1073, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 825 (Mass. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Perretta, J.

This appeal arises out of the efforts of the defendant, Linda Jean Johnson, to prohibit the plaintiffs from using, for customary beach activities, the seaward portion of her property situated on Cape Cod Bay in Eastham under claims of implied and prescribed easements. In a detailed and comprehensive decision on cross motions for summary judgment, a Land Court judge concluded that Johnson’s property extended seaward of her home to the mean low water elevation and that none of the plaintiffs has any right to use any portion of that land other than “to fish, fowl, or navigate between . . . the mean high water and mean low water elevations,” and judgment entered accordingly. The plaintiffs argue on appeal that Johnson failed to meet her burden of demonstrating ownership of the tidal flats, which they claim were severed from the upland portion of Johnson’s property, and that the judge erred in concluding that they had neither implied easements nor prescriptive rights in any portion of Johnson’s property. We affirm the judgment.

1. The title history of the property.3 Johnson purchased her property from Fred and Jane Liberatore by a deed dated August [827]*82731, 1999, followed by a confirmatory deed dated October 19, 2000. As shown on a plan dated June 23, 1924, and entitled “Plan of Lots, Leroy K. Houghton” (1924 plan), all of the land shown on the 1924 plan, including Johnson’s property, was at one time owned by Francis Smith.

On February 14, 1923, Smith conveyed what was subsequently shown as lots 11 and 39 on the 1924 plan to Hattie Williams by a deed containing a metes and bounds description beginning and ending at the “highwater mark” (emphasis added).4 By this deed, Smith also granted to Williams a right of way over his other land from the “main road [Bay Queen/ Kingsbury Beach Road] to the above described premises.” Next, on July 19, 1923, Smith conveyed a large lot of abutting land, described as bounded by the “highwater mark” (emphasis added) to Leroy K. Houghton (Houghton), while reserving for himself and his heirs “a right of way over the traveled road, over the above described premises to the west shore meaning to the water; to pass and repass.” Houghton thereafter created and recorded the 1924 plan reflecting the creation of some 111 small lots.5 A number of the plaintiffs own lots originating from this plan.

By a deed dated June 14, 1951, Jane Liberatore and her mother, Ethel T. Hicks, took title to lots 11 and 39 from the estate of Hattie Williams.6 Those two lots were again described as beginning and ending at the high water mark. Next, on October 20, 1964, Fred and Jane Liberatore purchased from Houghton lots 10 and 40 as shown on the 1924 plan, as well as the beach area fronting lot 10 to the high water mark, that is, prop[828]*828erty situated immediately adjacent to the parcel conveyed to Williams.7 The deed from Houghton to the Liberatores described the parcel by metes and bounds, with the seaward bound beginning at a stake at the highwater mark and then proceeding southerly along the high water mark at a distance of fifty-eight feet to a stake. It is lots 10, 11, 39, and 40 that comprise Johnson’s property.

Adjacent to the Williams portion of Johnson’s property, on the north side, is a road identified on the 1924 plan as Bay Queen Road, now commonly known as Kingsbury Beach Road. In 1935, Houghton conveyed that road to the town of Eastham (town). There is a town-maintained public beach at the terminus of Kings-bury Beach Road.

2. The controversy. According to the deposition testimony of Jane Liberatore, as well as her affidavit and the affidavits submitted by the various plaintiffs, Johnson’s seaward property from the foot of the sand dunes to the water was essentially treated and used by the plaintiffs as an extension of the public beach as far back as the 1940’s. Jane Liberatore described her observations of the use of her beach area by others and stated that although she never gave anyone permission to use the beach area, neither did she prohibit it. Jane Liberatore was of the belief that the beach should be a community resource enjoyed by all, irrespective of whether she knew the people using her property.

In August, 2004, Johnson posted no trespassing signs on her beach frontage because it had become so increasingly crowded that there were times when she could not enjoy her own property. Those signs prompted the present declaratory judgment action.

3. Discussion. In taking up the plaintiffs’ various claims in support of their assertion of the right to use Johnson’s beach frontage, the judge used the term “seaward portion” rather than “flats,” “beach,” or “shore.” He did so because of the plaintiffs’ claim of a “right to use not only the beach, but also a portion of [Johnson’s] upland property (the portion shoreward of her dune [snow] fence).” As the judge explained, “[i]n Massachusetts law, the terms ‘flats,’ ‘beach,’ and ‘shore’ are synonymous and mean “all the ground between the ordinary high water mark [829]*829and low water mark.’ Storer v. Freeman, 6 Mass. 435, 439 (1810). ‘Upland’ is the area above the high water mark. Id.” None of the parties protests the judge’s use of the term “seaward portion” or complains about his determination, based upon his consideration of precedent, scholarly articles, and the testimony of an expert, that the “high water mark” and the “low water mark” were to be measured in accordance with the objective, relevant, standardized, and publicly available data compiled from survey stations established by the Federal government and located throughout the country, that is, National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD).8

a. Extent of Johnson’s property. As explained in part 1, supra, Johnson’s property is composed of two parts, that is, the Williams parcel (lots 11 and 39, seaward) and the Houghton parcel (lots 10 and 40, seaward). These lots were originally owned by Smith. There is no need to look to historical considerations to determine whether Smith owned the tidal flats to those lots by virtue of a colonial ordinance. See Pazolt v. Director of the Div. of Marine Fisheries, 417 Mass. 565, 570 (1994) (“The Colonial Ordinance of 1641-1647 established that a person holding land adjacent to the sea shall hold title to the land out to the low water mark . . .”).

Because there is no evidence of any prior severance of the flats from the upland, and the plaintiffs do not identify any other owner of the flats, we presume, as did the judge, that Smith owned the upland and the flats. As the Supreme Judicial Court stated, id. at 570-571:

“The ‘presumption of law is, that title to the flats follows that of the upland on which they lie, and proof of title to the upland establish[es] a title to the flats.’ . . . ‘[A]n owner may separate his upland from his flats, by alienating the one, without the other. But such a conveyance is to be proved, not presumed, and therefore ordinarily proof of the title in the upland thus bounded carries with it evidence of title in the flats.’. . . ‘Since the passage of the [colonial] ordinance, a grant of land bounding on the sea shore carries the flats in the absence of excluding words.’ ” (Citations omitted).

[830]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
887 N.E.2d 1073, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houghton-v-johnson-massappct-2008.