Manning v. New England Mutual Life Insurance

399 Mass. 730
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 23, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 399 Mass. 730 (Manning v. New England Mutual Life Insurance) 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
Manning v. New England Mutual Life Insurance, 399 Mass. 730 (Mass. 1987).

Opinion

Hennessey, C.J.

The plaintiffs appeal from a judgment of a Land Court judge denying specific enforcement of restrictions in deeds to a parcel of land owned by the defendant. We conclude that the judge correctly ruled that the restrictions could not be enforced because of the failure to re-record them as required by G. L. c. 184, § 28.

New England Mutual Life Insurance Co. (defendant) owns land in the Back Bay section of Boston, bounded by Boylston Street, Berkeley Street, Clarendon Street, and St. James Avenue. The defendant purchased the parcel in two parts, the portion bordering Boylston Street from the Commissioners of Public Lands of the Commonwealth, and the portion bordering St. James Avenue from the Boston Water Power Company. The entire parcel had once been part of tidal flats which the Commonwealth filled, beginning in the 1850’s. The Commonwealth then sold lots in the area for dwellings, subject to restrictions in conformity with a comprehensive land use plan. See Blakeley v. Gorin, 365 Mass. 590, 592 (1974). These restrictions, known as the Commonwealth Restrictions, or the Back Bay Restrictions, include “[tjhat the front wall [of any building] on Boylston Street, shall be set back, twenty-five feet from said Boylston Street,”3 and “[t]hat a passageway twenty five feet wide, is to be laid out in the rear of the premises, the same to be filled in by the Commonwealth and to be kept open and maintained by the abutters in common.”

[732]*732The defendant plans to erect a building on its parcel which will be set back only ten feet, and will cover the alley which formerly ran down the middle of the parcel between the buildings on Boylston Street and those on St. James Avenue. The defendant has received certain zoning relief from the Boston Redevelopment Authority, the Boston Zoning Commission, and the board of appeal of Boston. Appeals from those board and agency actions are pending in separate actions.

Most of the plaintiffs are residents of the Back Bay. Several plaintiffs own property which was originally conveyed by the Commonwealth subject to the Commonwealth Restrictions. No plaintiff owns land which either lies in a block surrounded by the same streets as the defendant’s parcel or is contiguous to the defendant’s parcel. The plaintiffs concede that they would suffer no money damages, and seek specific enforcement of the restrictions.

The Land Court judge concluded that the restrictions were never brought forward as required by G. L. c. 184, § 28, and therefore could not be enforced against the defendant. The judge also concluded that, even if § 28 were not applicable, § 30 would bar the enforcement of the restrictions.* **4

1. The plaintiffs argue that the judge erred in finding that G. L. c. 184, § 28, barred enforcement of the restrictions.5 Section 28 provides in part: “No restriction imposed before January first, nineteen hundred and sixty-two shall be enforceable after the expiration of fifty years from its imposition unless [733]*733a notice of restriction is recorded before the expiration of such fifty years or before January first, nineteen hundred and sixty-four, whichever is later, and in case of such recording, twenty years have not expired after the recording of any notice of restriction without the recording of a further notice of restriction.” G. L. c. 184, § 28. The Legislature entitled the statute: “An Act to protect land titles from uncertain and obsolete restrictions and to provide proceedings in equity with respect thereto.” St. 1961, c. 448.

The plaintiffs concede that no notice of restrictions was recorded as required by § 28. Nevertheless, the plaintiffs argue that § 28 should not bar enforcement of the restrictions. The plaintiffs contend that the “necessary implication” of this court’s decision in Blakeley v. Gorin, supra, applying § 30 although the requirements of § 28 had not been satisfied, is that § 28 does not bar enforcement of the Commonwealth Restrictions. We disagree. The issue of compliance with § 28 was not argued or briefed in Blakeley v. Gorin, and this court did not address the issue. Nothing in Blakeley v. Gorin dictates that § 28 is inapplicable in this case.

The plaintiffs next argue that subsequent legislative history indicates that the Legislature did not intend § 28 to apply to restrictions contained in conveyances by the Commonwealth. In 1974, the Legislature amended § 28, adding: “The provisions of this section shall not be construed to apply to, and do not apply to, lands owned and conveyed by the commonwealth, notwithstanding any lapse of time or the passage of any prior law.” St. 1974, c. 527, § 3. This language, however, was deleted the following year. St. 1975, c. 356.

We do not agree with the plaintiffs’ contention that this subsequent legislative history establishes that § 28 should not apply to the Commonwealth Restrictions. Even if we were to interpret the 1974 amendment as reviving restrictions previously extinguished by § 28, the subsequent deletion of the 1974 amendment would operate to have the opposite effect. We are not convinced by the plaintiffs’ suggestion that the Legislature repealed the 1974 amendments because it concluded that Blakeley v. Gorin, decided immediately after the [734]*7341974 amendments, had achieved the result of making the Commonwealth Restrictions enforceable despite § 28. A more reasonable interpretation of the Legislature’s action is that it intended to do precisely what it accomplished: the repeal of the 1974 amendment.

We therefore conclude that § 28 is applicable to the restrictions in this case. The plaintiffs are unable to point to any other provision exempting them from the requirement of § 28 that notice of the restrictions must be re-recorded. Therefore, the restrictions on the defendant’s parcel are unenforceable by virtue of § 28.

2. The plaintiffs argue that application of § 28 would violate the contract clause of the United States Constitution, U.S. Const., art. I, cl. 10.6 According to the plaintiffs, § 28 impermissibly extinguished valuable contractual rights which the Commonwealth had a duty to enforce.7 We have recognized that these restrictions can form a valuable right. See Blakeley v. Gorin, supra at 604.

The plaintiffs do not argue that § 28 would be unconstitutional as applied to restrictions imposed in transactions between private parties. Instead, the plaintiffs assert that the fact that the Commonwealth was the original grantor imposing the restrictions requires closer scrutiny of the Legislature’s subsequent enactment affecting those restrictions. Cf. United States Trust Co. v. New Jersey, 431 U.S. 1, 25-26 (1977). Even if we were to accept the plaintiffs’ assertion that the Commonwealth is under some continuing contractual obligation to the successors of the original grantees subject to the restrictions, we would still find that application of § 28 involved no constitutional infirmity under the contract clause. In El Paso v. Simmons, 379 U.S. 497 (1965), the United States Supreme Court upheld a State statute which limited the right of grantees [735]

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Related

Jones v. Murphy
799 N.E.2d 595 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2003)
Manning v. Boston Redevelopment Authority
509 N.E.2d 1173 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
399 Mass. 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-new-england-mutual-life-insurance-mass-1987.