Norton v. Murphy

3 Mass. Supp. 268
CourtMassachusetts Land Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1982
DocketNo. 101789
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Mass. Supp. 268 (Norton v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Land Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norton v. Murphy, 3 Mass. Supp. 268 (Mass. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

DECISION

The plaintiff, Alan T. Norton, as executor of the will of his father, Cyril D. Norton, brought this complaint pursuant to the provisions of Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 231A, § 1 for a determination of the rights and interests of the parties in a certain parcel of real estate situtated in Chilmark, in the County of Dukes. The defendant, Lynn C. Murphy, of said Chilmark, is the former brother-in-law of the plaintiff. In his answer the defendant claimed title to locus by adverse possession.

[269]*269A trial was held in the Land Court on November 10, 1981 at which a stenographer was appointed to record and transcribe the testimony. All exhibits introduced into evidence are incorporated herein by reference for the purpose of any appeal. At the commencement of the trial the parties presented the court with a stipulation that the record title to the land involved in the dispute and referred to as the “Hilltop” lot in the complaint was in the plaintiff. It generally is referred to in the decision as the “locus”. The stipulation also provided that the land was in Chilmark and set forth the metes and bounds description as follows:

“BEGINNING at a pipe set at the most northerly point of land of the Defendant herein;
THENCE one hundred seventy eight (178) feet more or less in a general north northwesterly direction to a point and wall called King Wall;
THENCE following the King Wall in a general westerly direction two hundred ninety-nine and 15/100 (299.15) feet more or less to a travelled way approximately fourteen (14) feet wide;
THENCE following the travelled way in a general southerly direction approximately two hundred forty (240) feet more or less to a white rock in an existing stone wall and a right of way;
THENCE following the right of way in a general southeasterly direction ■ approximately sixty-five (65) feet more or less to an iron pipe set;
THENCE in a general northeasterly direction approximately three hundred seventy-three and 63/100 (373.63) feet more or less by land of Valerie N. Murphy and Lynn C. Murphy to point of beginning. Containing approximately two acres more or less.
Said land is encompassed in, and part of, land described in deed from Reginald B. Norton, Cyril D. Norton, and Muriel C. Smith to Goldie G. Norton dated November 23, 1945, acknowledged February 25, 1946, and recorded March 9, 1946 in the Dukes County Registry of Deeds, Book 210, Page 526.”

After the introduction of the stipulation and an opening by the plaintiff’s counsel, the plaintiff rested. The defendant’s counsel then made an opening after which the defendant and two residents of Chilmark who are friends and business acquaintances of the defendant testified. The plaintiff then called two rebuttal witnesses.

On all the evidence I find and rule as follows:

1. The defendant married Valerie Norton on January 29, 1949 in Boston, and seven children were bom of the marriage. The first child was bom on November 20, 1949. The couple was divorced in 1976. The defendant has remarried, and also has children by his second wife.

2. In 1954 or 1955 the defendant and his wife Valerie moved to Martha’s Vineyard and attemped to find a business to purchase. One venture which was considered was the purchase of a boat yard in conjunction with one of Mrs. Murphy’s cousins; each of the two partners was to contribute $5,000. This transaction was never consummated.

3. Under date of August 2, 1955, the defendant and his mother-in-law executed a promissory note to the Edgar-town National Bank in the. amount of [270]*270$5,000 (Exhibit No. 2). The note was paid in full on December 24, 1957 by the defendant. Valerie Murphy testified in rebuttal that these moneys were borrowed to be used as the Murphys’ contribution to the boatyard purchase and that when it was not consummated, the sum of $1,500 was paid to her mother for the purchase of nonlocus property adjacent to the Hilltop Lot with the balance expended for Murphy Mving expenses and materials for the construction of their home. The defendant had previously testified that the balance of the $5,000 was used to purchase construction materials for Mrs. Norton’s home and represented the purchase price of the land in dispute. In her testimony, Valerie Murphy denied this. I find the rebuttal testimony to be more convincing.

4. By deed dated September 10, 1955 and recorded with Dukes County Registry of Deeds on January 27, 1956 in Book 230, Page 85 (Exhibit No. 3)2 Goldie G. Norton, the defendant’s mother-in-law, conveyed to him a parcel of land in Chilmark adjacent to the locus. The premises were conveyed with an appurtenant right of way over remaining land of the grantor and with the benefit of a right to “drive” for water thereon and subject to the grantor’s reserved right to “drive” for water on the granted premises. It was in response to a request by Valerie Murphy and upon payment of $1,500 that this conveyance was made.

5. Later in 1956 Mrs. Norton gave the defendant a confirmatory deed to the same land conveyed to him by the deed dated September 10, 1955 and duly recorded in Book 230, Page 452. (Exhibit No. 4). The description in the confirmatory deed referred to a plan entitled “Plan of Land in Chilmark, Mass. Surveyed for Lynn C. Murphy, March 3, 1956, Scale 1”=50\ Hollis A. Smith, M.S. Reg’d. Land Surveyor, Vineyard Haven, Mass.” This plan was not introduced into evidence, but it would appear to have been very similiar to the plan which is Exhibit No. 1 without the subdivision into the two lots which appears thereon. This deed also contained the grant of a right of way, made provision for water and added the right to install, maintain and replace a pole line for the transmission of power and intelligence. The defendant contends that it was his belief that this deed conveyed the present locus rather than confirming the earlier grant.

6. The defendant and his wife Valerie built a home, incorporating as part thereof, a motor trailer, on the premises conveyed by Valerie Murphy’s mother to the defendant. The well or pump house was located on the locus and the cesspool may be.

7. The defendant in the intervening years from 1955 or 1956 to the present, had a shop on his own land. There is no dispute that in the same time span the defendant stored motor vehicles, boats and trailers which he either owned or undertook to repair for third parties on the adjoining lot, i.e. the locus. Over the years he has prevented outsideres from parking on the locus to attend Little League games in an adjacent baseball diamond. He has never paid real estate taxes on the locus and does not claim otherwise.

8. Mrs. Norton died in 1957, and apparently record ownership of the locus passed to her husband, Cyril. Her husband lived in Chilmark for the remaining twenty years of his life. He visited the Murphys nearly daily to enjoy their television set as well as presumably the company of his daughter and grandchildren. He and the defendant were not on good terms and rarely spoke. Valerie Murphy always approached her father with any request made by the Murphy family. Mr. Norton was said to have remarked that he did not mind the defendant using the locus so long as the Norton family didn’t wish either to use or sell it, but he wished that “Lynn were a little bit more neat about it.” Valerie Murphy did [271]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Mass. Supp. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-murphy-masslandct-1982.