Pion v. Dwight

417 N.E.2d 20, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 406, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 949
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 417 N.E.2d 20 (Pion v. Dwight) 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
Pion v. Dwight, 417 N.E.2d 20, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 406, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 949 (Mass. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

In 1957, three adjoining parcels of land in Shelburne were owned by Dorothy Harris (hereafter Harris). These parcels (see accompanying very rough sketch map) were on the north side of Old Greenfield Road (sometimes called Old County Road). Two parcels, referred to, *407 respectively, as the Dwight lot and the Pion lot, directly abutted on Old Greenfield Road. The Reynolds lot adjoined the northerly boundaries of the Dwight lot and the Pion lot. Harris acquired each of these three lots by separate conveyances but in 1955 they were all merged in one ownership.

Harris conveyed two parcels comprising the Dwight lot to one Hoskeer on July 31, 1957. In the deed, she reserved “a right of way 25 feet in width running northerly from the Old County Road to land of . . . Harris, formerly of Reynolds, located north of said tract. . . following the course of and including within its width the lane now extending north through the east portion” of the first parcel then conveyed by her. This east portion of the first parcel was a strip two hundred feet wide west of and adjoining the Pion lot throughout its whole length. After this conveyance Harris continued to own the Reynolds and Pion lots. In 1959, she gave a mortgage of the Reynolds and Pion lots to Franklin Savings Institution (Institution) which later foreclosed the mortgage. The Pion and the Reynolds lots were conveyed in 1962, by Institution to the present plaintiff, Lawrence A. Pion, and his wife, “together with such appurtenances and subject to such encumbrances as are set forth in the” deed of July 31, 1957, to Hoskeer. Lawrence Pion and his wife later were divorced and, in connection with the divorce, his wife conveyed her interest in the Pion lot to him, and he conveyed his interest in the Reynolds lot to her.

Hoskeer on June 2, 1962, conveyed the Dwight lot to Edward S. Dwight and his wife, the present defendants, “subject to reservation of a twenty-five . . . foot right of way over the easterly portion of” one of the two parcels comprising the Dwight lot.

The trial judge found that, on November 23, 1977, the Dwights “erected a wire gate across the [sjoutherly end of the right of way as it leaves Old County Road.” Since then Pion has been “prevented from using the right of way in connection with the ‘Pion lot’.”

*408 Pion brought a complaint in the Probate and Family Court (alleging many of the facts stated above) seeking (a) removal of the gate obstructing the right of way, (b) a permanent injunction ordering the defendants to refrain from interfering with Pion’s use of the right of way, and (c) damages. The defendants denied that Pion had, appurtenant to the Pion lot, the privilege of using the right of way.

The case was tried on a partial statement of agreed facts and oral testimony. The trial judge made findings and rulings and ordered judgment declaring that Pion “has the right to use the right of way in connection with” the Pion lot, ordering the removal of the wire gate at the southerly end of the right of way, enjoining interference with Pion’s use of the right of way, and finding damages of $1,000. By motion of the defendants (supported by several affidavits) various changes in the findings and in the judgment were requested. After hearing, an additional finding was made that the gate at the southerly end of the right of way had been built to restrain the defendants’ cows and could be opened by manipulating a catch or latch. The judgment was modified to permit further maintenance of the gate with “a latch or handbar that can easily be opened.” The defendants appealed.

1. The trial judge made the following findings among others, (a) Harris, prior to 1957, operated a farm on all three lots, (b) Her farmhouse was on the southerly part of the Pion lot where Pion now lives, (c) Harris had used “an old woods road,” presumably the “lane” mentioned in the reservation of the right of way, (1) for “driving cattle” onto the Reynolds lot and the northerly part of the Pion lot, 2 and (2) for “gathering wood and timber on both” the Reynolds lot and the northerly part of the Pion lot. (d) There was a wire fence along the easterly boundary of the Dwight lot to restrain the cattle, (e) There was an opening in this fence *409 through which “one could pass and drive cattle from the old woods road onto” the northerly part of the Pion lot. (f) After the 1957 conveyance, Harris used the right of way in the same way she had used the old woods road prior to the reservation of the right of way, both in connection with the Reynolds lot and the Pion lot, until 1962. (g) Pion and his ex-wife did the same from 1962 to 1975, as did Pion after the divorce in 1975 until 1977, when the defendants erected the gate.

2. The partial statement of agreed facts contains nothing with respect to the use of the right of way either prior to or after Harris’ 1957 deed to Hoskeer. It thus is necessary to examine the statement of evidence (Mass.R.A.P. 8[c]) to determine whether the judge’s findings are supported by the evidence. From such an examination, we conclude that the sentences marked (c) (2) and (f) in the preceding paragraph (summarizing the judge’s findings) go somewhat beyond the evidence recited in the statement of evidence. Any testimony concerning Harris’s “gathering of wood and timber” on the Reynolds and Pion lots and about Harris’s use of the right of way after her 1957 deed until 1962 is either inconsistent with, or less specific than, the judge’s findings on these points. 3 In the view we take of the case this may be of no importance (see part 3 of this opinion, infra). The statement of evidence does contain one piece of Pion’s testimony, not mentioned in the judge’s findings, which seems to us significant, viz. that Pion “used the right of way as it constituted the only means for him to get to the woods on the northerly portion of the ‘Pion Lot,’ because of the contour of the northerly portion of the ‘Pion Lot’ in relation to the *410 southerly portion of that lot; and specifically because of the rocky ridge separating the two portions of the lot.” 4

3. The reservation in Harris’ 1957 deed to Hoskeer does not limit by any express language the reserved easement as being only for the benefit of the Reynolds lot. On the contrary, the reference to the Reynolds lot in the reservation seems to us merely descriptive and an effort to define the northern end of the easement already marked by a “woods road” or lane, which (because included in the easement) defines its general route. The references to the Reynolds lot and County Road we view as no more than a statement of the termini of the right of way and as not relating to its use or scope. See Jones v. Stevens, 276 Mass. 318, 322 (1931). The easement we interpret as reserved for the benefit of all the parcels owned by Harris at the time of her 1957 deed which were adjacent to any part of the right of way. Even the defendants admit that the right of way was intended for the benefit of the Reynolds lot, retained by Harris after the 1957 deed.

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Bluebook (online)
417 N.E.2d 20, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 406, 1981 Mass. App. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pion-v-dwight-massappct-1981.