Murphy v. Olsen

826 N.E.2d 249, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 417
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMay 4, 2005
DocketNo. 04-P-431
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 826 N.E.2d 249 (Murphy v. Olsen) 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
Murphy v. Olsen, 826 N.E.2d 249, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 417 (Mass. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Dreben, J.

This action for declaratory relief was brought by inland landowners seeking to establish beach rights over a portion of Wingaersheek Beach in Gloucester and over a way (Sandy Way) to that beach. They claim these rights are incident to an express reservation of a pedestrian easement “to the beach” in deeds to two of the defendants. The matter was [418]*418submitted to a judge of the Land Court on a trial stipulation4 and agreed upon exhibits without testimony from witnesses.5 After taking a view (with counsel), the judge determined that the reserved easement was incapable of being exercised for the purpose granted and was extinguished. In claiming error by the judge, the plaintiffs rely, among other arguments, on the principle that an easement carries with it all rights reasonably necessary for the full enjoyment of the easement. We reverse.

The underlying facts are undisputed. The plaintiff-trustees6 were the developers of two residential noncontiguous subdivisions in Gloucester, one abutting the Atlantic Ocean which included a portion of Wingaersheek Beach (the beach parcel) and the other located inland (the inland parcel). See Appendix to this opinion for sketch of the parcels.

The trustees acquired the two parcels, each of which contains slightly more than ten acres,7 by a single deed of Mary Brier Goodhue and Nancy Brier Ford dated February 25, 1980 (the Goodhue deed). That deed included the following language which we refer to as the “beach use” clause:

“Together . . . with the right to use Wingaersheek Beach for its entire length for walking, swimming, sunbathing, [419]*419fishing, shellfishing and other recreational purposes in common with the grantors and others entitled thereto.”8

In 1981, by a plan to which we refer as the Sandy Way plan, the trustees subdivided the beach parcel into eleven residential lots, all of which are shown to border on Sandy Way. That way runs from Atlantic Avenue toward the beach and ends in a culde-sac bordered by lots six through ten, which are the beachfront lots of the subdivision.

The easement relied on by the plaintiffs was created by the following reservation in the deeds to lots eight and seven of the beach subdivision, lots which were conveyed by the trustees to separate buyers in September, 1982 and April, 1983:9

“Reserving to the Grantors, their successors and assigns, and others entitled thereto, as appurtenant to all of their remaining land, a ten foot pedestrian easement as shown on [the Sandy Way Plan] to and from Sandy Way to the beach and hereby conveying to the Grantee the right to use said easement in common with others entitled thereto, 5’ of which is over [the relevant lot].”

After the conveyance of lot seven, the trustees owned the inland parcel and seven of the remaining lots in the beach subdivision. By June of 1984, the trustees had conveyed all of the lots in the beach subdivision to separate buyers.

The deed to each lot in the Sandy Way subdivision included the “beach use” clause contained in the Goodhue deed and a clause giving the lot owner “the right to use Sandy Way together with others lawfully entitled thereto for all purposes (except parking) for which public ways may be used in the City of Gloucester.” In addition, the lots without beach frontage (lots one through five and lot eleven) were given the benefit of a ten foot wide pedestrian easement “to and from Sandy Way to the beach.”

In 1990, the trustees subdivided a portion of the inland parcel [420]*420into two lots, and in 1992 subdivided the remaining portion into seven lots. The inland parcel has a deeded easement over Atlantic Avenue from the inland parcel to the beach parcel.10

The conveyances of lots in the subdivision of the inland parcel all contained the “beach use” clause, and some of those lots were conveyed with specific reference to the right to use Sandy Way and the ten-foot pedestrian path. Whether such rights were expressly mentioned in the deeds to the inland lot owners is of little consequence as any existing rights not excluded by the grantors were included in the deeds to the grantees by operation of law. G. L. c. 183, § 15.11 The question is whether the reservation by the trustees of the pedestrian easements in the deeds to lots eight and seven of the beach subdivision reserved the rights to the beach and to Sandy Way for the trustees’ remaining inland land.

In analyzing the issue, the judge first determined that the “beach use” clause in the Goodhue deed was a nullity because there was no legal basis for the grant. As “[a]n easement is an interest in land which grants to one person the right to use or enjoy land owned by another,” see Commercial Wharf E. Condominium Assoc. v. Waterfront Parking Corp., 407 Mass. 123, 133 (1990), and since the trustees were given a fee to the beach property by the Goodhue deed, the judge ruled they could not hold an easement encumbering the title to their own land. See Goldstein v. Beal, 317 Mass. 750, 754 (1945).12 The judge then held that even if the trustees had the benefit of an ease[421]*421ment in the beach, the effect of their failure to reserve that easement when they conveyed the beachfront lots meant that they no longer held such rights and were unable to grant them to the owners of the inland lots. He applied a similar analysis to Sandy Way. Pointing to G. L. c. 183, § 58, he noted that the fee title had passed to each of the lots fronting on that way. The trustees, having failed to reserve any rights in the way, were unable to convey any to the inland lot owners.

Although the trustees had not reserved rights in the beach and in Sandy Way, the judge found that “the trustees reserved their rights in the pedestrian easement with the intention that it would be available for the owner of the Inland Parcel or for various owners of lots to be later created.” He determined, however, that the reserved easement was extinguished because the inland lot owners had “no rights on either end of that easement area.”13

Our analysis differs. We begin with the reservation of the pedestrian easement. The judge correctly concluded that the pedestrian easement was for the benefit of the inland parcel as well as for the beach subdivision. The reservation by the trustees in the deeds to lots eight and seven of the beach subdivision stated that the pedestrian easement was “appurtenant to all of their remaining land” (emphasis supplied). Even in the absence of such language, “[a]n easement is to be interpreted as available for use by the whole of the dominant tenement existing at the time of its creation.” Pion v. Dwight, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 406, 410 (1981). The servient estate need not be adjacent to the dominant. Jones v. Stevens, 276 Mass. 318, 325 (1931).

While the judge stated that he recognized “the principle that an easement carries with it all rights reasonably necessary for the full enjoyment of that easement,” he found it “inequitable [422]

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Bluebook (online)
826 N.E.2d 249, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-olsen-massappct-2005.