Morgan v. Moore

69 Mass. 319
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 69 Mass. 319 (Morgan v. Moore) 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
Morgan v. Moore, 69 Mass. 319 (Mass. 1855).

Opinion

Bigelow, J.

The premises demanded in this action were originally a portion of a large tract of land, lying at the corner of Leverett and Berry (now Minot) Streets, in the westerly part of Boston, formerly belonging to Isaac Vibert. After the death 9Í" Vibert in 1776, the entire estate remained undivided in his [320]*320heirs until the year 1809, when his three surviving children entered into an agreement for the division of his real estate, which was carried into effect in May of that year, by mutual releases from each to the other, of their respective shares, which had been agreed upon and set out in severalty. In the division of this large tract of land among the three heirs, the premises now demanded were described as “ a passage way twenty five feet wide and seventy five feet deep, leading from Berry Street to lot C. No. 3, to be always kept open to said lot No. 3.” The descriptions, in all the deeds of release of the heirs to each other, were exactly alike in this particular; and the several < lots, as set out to the heirs, were bounded on this passage way.

The question is, whether, by the true construction of these deeds, the land comprehended in the passage way was divided and conveyed in severalty by their respective deeds to each other, one third to each, or whether it remained undivided and in common. If the former is the true construction, then the demandants have no title to the estate in controversy, because it has all been conveyed by deeds of their ancestors, containing descriptions exactly corresponding with the original division. If the latter is the correct interpretation of the deeds, then the demanded premises have never been conveyed by the ancestors of the demandants, and the fee of an undivided portion of the passage way still remains in the demandants as tenants in common.

Whether the rule of interpretation, in relation to boundaries in deeds upon highways and public roads, would be applicable to a case of this character, where the boundary is on a private passage way, laid out by tenants in common for their own special use, so as to carry the fee to the centre of the passage way, unless a contrary intent clearly appeared from the terms of the grant, we have no occasion to determine, because we think it is very clear that such was not the intent of the parties to the original division of the estate in question, as manifested by their deeds.

In making the division of the entire parcel of land, the several lots, set out to the heirs, are distinguished by letters and figuréis, [321]*321designating the individual to whom each lot belongs; and the admeasurements of each lot are accurately given. In each deed reference is made to a plan of the estate, which was recorded with the deeds of partition, bearing the signatures and seals of the several heirs, and the material part of which is copied in the margin

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Bluebook (online)
69 Mass. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-moore-mass-1855.