Pappas v. Maxwell

150 N.E.2d 521, 337 Mass. 552, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 701
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 13, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 150 N.E.2d 521 (Pappas v. Maxwell) 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
Pappas v. Maxwell, 150 N.E.2d 521, 337 Mass. 552, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 701 (Mass. 1958).

Opinion

Counihan, J.

These are two bills in equity brought by the owner of premises numbered 25 Home Street in Hamilton. The first bill was filed on January 17, 1955. In it the plaintiff sought a determination of the ownership and the location of a right of way alleged to exist between the plaintiff’s premises and those of the defendant. In the bill the plaintiff also sought injunctive relief against the defendant from interfering with an outhouse and shed situated on part of the right of way. This bill was referred to a master who filed a report. On September 30, 1955, an interlocutory decree was entered sustaining two of the plaintiff’s excep *554 tians to the report and sustaining one exception of the defendant. All other exceptions were overruled and the report was confirmed. The plaintiff appealed from the interlocutory decree confirming the master’s report, and from the denial of the plaintiff’s motion to recommit, to dismiss the report, to vacate order of reference and to refer the case to a new master or have it heard by the court. On May 21, 1956, several months after the master’s report was confirmed, the plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss her bill which was denied after hearing. From the denial of this motion the plaintiff also appealed. On September 21, 1956, a final decree was entered establishing the right of way at a width of eight feet and declaring that part of the right of way originally established had been extinguished by exclusive, open, continuous and adverse possession of the defendant for more than twenty years. The plaintiff also appealed from the final decree. There was no error.

On June 4, 1956, before the entry of the final decree in the first suit, the second bill by the plaintiff was filed seeking substantially the same relief sought in the first. A plea in abatement by the defendants was sustained by a judge and he ordered the second bill to be dismissed. A final decree was entered dismissing this bill from which the plaintiff appealed. There was no error.

Some of the alleged errors in the first suit were not argued in the plaintiff’s brief so we treat them as waived. Rule 13 of the Rules for the Regulation of Practice before the Full Court (1952), 328 Mass. 698. Those argued we deal with below.

The substance of the master’s report in the first suit as confirmed by the judge is as follows: One J. Webster Dane originally owned the entire tract comprising the lots involved. Sometime before May 9, 1908 (it does not appear when), he moved onto this land the two buildings owned and occupied by the parties to this suit. The foundation lines of these buildings are about fifteen feet apart. To the rear of what is now the defendant’s lot and largely within the area between the foundation fines of the houses as ex *555 tended he moved at the same time an outhouse with doors on each side of it for the use of the owners of the two lots.

By deed dated May 9, 1908, Dane conveyed the land now owned by the defendant “with the buildings thereon” to one Bridges and others. The lengths of the boundary lines of this land were given as approximate distances in feet. In this deed it was further recited, “The line on the north easterly side of the granted premises and dividing the same from other land of the grantor runs through the middle of a foot and carriage way, which way is to be used in common by each and every one of the parties to this deed and their heirs and assigns as appurtenant to their respective estates.”

By deed dated August 27,1921, he conveyed the remaining lot to James P. Pappas, the deceased husband of the plaintiff and one of her predecessors in title. From the time of this conveyance the plaintiff and her family occupied the dwelling house on her lot. The defendant acquired title to her lot by deed of Bridges and others dated December 6, 1928, and with her family has since occupied the dwelling house on that lot.

Sometime between 1921 and December 6, 1928 (it does not appear just when), an extension was added to the front of the outhouse projecting toward the front of the lot. It was built by one of Bridges’s coowners and some of the materials used were furnished by the plaintiff. Since the beginning of 1929, the outhouse has not been used for its original purpose. Continuously after January 1, 1929, the defendant’s automobiles were exclusively garaged in that structure until sometime in 1951 when due to want of repair it became no longer usable. The plaintiff and the members of her family never used this structure for the garaging of automobiles.

From early in 1929 the original outhouse was used by the defendant, primarily for storage, to the exclusion of the plaintiff and members of her family. Later the defendant’s husband removed part of the roof of this building and attached it to her house as a portico over the front door. Some months later the defendant’s husband reroofed the section *556 he had taken off. Early in 1929, he nailed the door on the plaintiff’s side of the original outhouse and placed a workbench against the inside of this door. All this was done without any objection on the part of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff in 1945 or 1946 ripped some boards off the side of this building facing her house. The master expressly found that this incident was not sufficient to interrupt the defendant’s adverse possession.

The master further found that the defendant made constant, uninterrupted and adverse use of the area to the rear of the outhouse on her side of the stake line 1 to store ladders, sawhorses and tools without objection from the plaintiff. She also planted bushes along the stake line to the rear of the outhouse which served as a fence as they grew. These bushes were cut down by the plaintiff’s daughter twenty-five years after they were planted.

Part of the area between the two houses has been used as a driveway since 1921. The center line of this driveway was about two feet one half inch on the defendant’s side of the stake line. At no time since 1921 has the stake line been the middle of the driveway as it was actually used. The master found the driveway as actually used to be the right of way referred to in the earlier deeds. Because the doors of the outhouse and the extension facing Home Street opened outward the master found that the right of way ceased four feet from the front of the extension.

The decree of the court holds that the stake line is the dividing fine between the two properties and that this line was the center of an eight foot right of way which is sufficient for foot passage and to accommodate present day pleasure vehicles and delivery trucks. It further held that the right of way ceased at a point about four feet in front of the rear building because of extinguishment by the adverse possession of the defendant.

*557 The final decree in the first bill differs from the conclusion of the master’s report only in regard to the determination of the line separating the two lots. The judge was right in his interpretation of the original deeds from Dane as conveying two contiguous lots whose common property line was to be the center of the right of way.

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E.2d 521, 337 Mass. 552, 1958 Mass. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pappas-v-maxwell-mass-1958.