Inhabitants of Brookline v. Whidden

229 Mass. 485
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 229 Mass. 485 (Inhabitants of Brookline v. Whidden) 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
Inhabitants of Brookline v. Whidden, 229 Mass. 485 (Mass. 1918).

Opinion

Rugg, C. J.

These are suits in equity whereby the plaintiff seeks to have removed obstructions placed by each of the defendants in a private way known as Essex Street in the town of Brookline. The plaintiff, as grantee in deeds of two parcels of land, one called the Amory Playground and the other Mason [488]*488Square, asserts proprietary ownership of rights of way in Essex Street. The cases were referred to a master, whose findings of fact must be accepted as true since there is no report of the evidence.

Summarily stated, the material circumstances are that in 1827, by indenture duly executed and recorded, Ebenezer Francis and David Sears, being owners of large tracts .of adjoining land, laid out along their boundary line a new road fifty feet wide, each contributing one half the required land. The description of the way, thrice repeated in the indenture, was that it extended from Brighton Road "southerly about one hundred and fifty rods until it comes to the pond.” The recital in the indenture is that the way is for the mutual benefit and common use of Sears and of Francis as owners of tracts of land (including the several parcels owned by the parties hereto), and their respective heirs and assigns, and of all persons going to or from their respective tracts of land or any part thereof. This new way, known as Essex Street, was shown as extending to and beyond the pond in a series of published or recorded plans by different civil engineers between 1849 and 1885. That parr of Essex Street between Brighton Road and Ivy Street became a public highway and respecting that no question now is raised. The controversy centres about that portion extending southerly from Ivy Street and beyond the pond. The estates of the defendants are on the southerly side of Ivy Street on opposite corners of Essex Street. This portion of Essex Street extending southerly from Ivy Street was a well defined, ordinary country road, and long before the ownership of the parties to the present suit, had been put in a condition safe for travel for persons and vehicles. It was open and dedicated to public use. At or near the pond it joined Freeman Street. On one side Essex Street was marked by a high hedge, along which next to the street was a well defined raised walkway suitable for use by pedestrians; on a part of the other side was a fence of stone posts and iron chains. The shore line of the pond was not immovable, but varied somewhat in location by reason of swamp, drainage, wet and dry seasons, filling, and perhaps other causes. The street was used by people both on foot and in vehicles until 1876, when the superintendent of streets of the town, because a traveller had been drowned in the pond, placed a barrier at or near Ivy Street, [489]*489effectually preventing vehicles from entering Essex Street, but not seriously obstructing travel on foot. Thereafter vehicles did not use that portion of Essex Street, but it continued to be used at all times by pedestrians resorting to the pond or its shores or near by land for sports or picnicking. Freeman Street to its junction with Essex Street at the pond also was open and used as a private way for a considerable traffic by vehicles from about 1858 to 1876. In 1890 the officers of the town granted a license for the erection of electric light poles in the street, which were placed in accordance therewith.

The town has no right in its governmental capacity to the locus of the street, but it has rights as a municipal corporation owning land abutting on the street. Those rights arise from its purchase in 1903 of a tract of land for use as a public playground bounded on Freeman Street and on its junction with Essex Street and on Essex Street as and if extended southerly from such junction. The premises were conveyed with the right “so far as the grantors have the power to grant the same, to use said Freeman Street and Essex Street for all purposes for which public ways are commonly used in said Town” and subject to the agreement of 1827 between Francis and Sears. This land was owned at the time of the indenture in 1827 by Sears. A part of it was conveyed by Sears to his daughter in 1845 and it bounded on a line corresponding to the centre line of Essex Street as laid out in the indenture of 1827 as if extended across the pond southerly to Beacon Street. The remainder was devised to his daughter by will, proved in 1871, by a description bounding on Freeman Street and Essex Street and their intersection. Both these tracts were conveyed by the heirs of the daughter in 1903 to the grantors in the deed to the town “with the benefit of and subject to such rights and easements as may now be in force respecting the laying out and use of a street fifty feet wide called Essex Street along the easterly side of the granted premises.” By will Sears gave the “fee of the streets and squares I have laid out and opened on my estate” to his children and their issue “in trust that the same shall be kept open forever for ornament and use as streets and squares only and for the benefit of all residents . . . contiguous to said streets and squares. . . .”

The report of the master appears fairly susceptible of the con[490]*490struction that he finds that the right to use Essex Street as created by the indenture of 1827 attached as an easement to the land included within the purchase by the' town for the playground. It appears to have been contiguous at one corner. But, however that may be, from the facts found by him it is plain that it was the intention of the parties to the indenture that the easement thereby created should be appurtenant not alone to adjacent lands but to the “several parcels owned by the parties thereto.” Graham v. Walker, 78 Conn. 130. Boland v. St. John’s Schools, 163 Mass. 229. It follows as matter of law that an easement to use the way laid out by the indenture of 1827 was created and used, and that that easement passed by grant as appurtenant to the playground land when purchased by the town. The easement was created by written instrument, recorded in the registry of deeds. It was denned thereby. It was declared to be for the benefit of the owner of this parcel of land among others. By its record all the world was given notice of the way and of the persons for whose benefit it was established. The way physically was made manifest on the face of the earth. It was used for travel of all kinds without question for many years before 1876. The easement was co-extensive with the way as laid out and attached to its full width of fifty feet. Fox v. Union Sugar Refinery, 109 Mass. 292. Essex Street is referred to by name as being a boundary of that portion of the playground lot devised by Sears to his daughter in 1871. The easement passed by grant to the town. New England Structural Co. v. Everett Distilling Co. 189 Mass. 145. Burnham v. Mahoney, 222 Mass. 524. Ralph v. Clifford, 224 Mass. 58, 60. Gorton-Pew Fisheries Co. v. Tolman, 210 Mass. 402. The town could acquire such easement by grant as well as by prescription or reservation. Commonwealth v. Low, 3 Pick. 408.

It is contended that the easement of the town has been extinguished. That contention is grounded in part upon the action of the superintendent of streets of the town, either of his own motion or by direction of the selectmen, in placing a barrier across' the entrance to Essex Street from Ivy Street in 1876 and maintaining it for many years thereafter. At that time the playground lot was in private ownership, the town not acquiring its title by deed until 1903.

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Bluebook (online)
229 Mass. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-brookline-v-whidden-mass-1918.