Sargeant v. Traverse Building Trust

167 N.E. 233, 267 Mass. 490, 1929 Mass. LEXIS 1317
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 4, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 167 N.E. 233 (Sargeant v. Traverse Building Trust) 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
Sargeant v. Traverse Building Trust, 167 N.E. 233, 267 Mass. 490, 1929 Mass. LEXIS 1317 (Mass. 1929).

Opinion

Cbosby, J.

These are suits in equity seeking to enjoin the defendants from building over and changing the grade of a right of way over real estate of the defendants appurtenant to real estate of the plaintiffs, and for damages caused by the acts of the defendants. A stenographer to take the evidence was appointed in accordance with Equity Rule 29 (1926). By stipulation of the parties the original exhibits introduced in evidence in the Superior Court may be referred to so far as necessary in the consideration of the issues before this court. The case is before us on the plaintiffs’ appeals from the final decrees, the plaintiffs claiming to be aggrieved by the parts thereof permitting the defendants to arch over the right of way and to fix the height at which the arch may be built, and by the granting of affirmative relief to the defendants on the pleadings and facts; but they accept the decrees and waive their appeal therefrom except as above stated.

[492]*492After the original findings and order for decrees, the trial judge filed supplemental findings of fact in which he stated that he had taken a view of the premises against the objection of the plaintiffs and examined “a wooden covered passageway, approximately seven feet high and three feet wide, which had been constructed by the defendants running from the Sargeant land to Church Street. . . [and that] The final decree ordered to be entered . . . [was] based partly upon the results of the examination and view taken by . . . [him] of the premises and of the wooden passageway.”

It is the contention of the plaintiffs that paragraph “2” of the final decree “is evidently based on a supplemental finding of fact made by the judge after the evidence was closed and after a visit of the judge to view the premises against the protest and objection of the petitioners.”

It appears that the defendants are owners of the lot formerly numbered 25 Shawmut Street, in Boston, at the intersection of that street and Church Street, and that they also own the next two lots to the east formerly numbered 23 and 21 on Shawmut Street. The plaintiff Sargeant and another are the owners of the next lot to the east numbered 19 Shawmut Street, and the plaintiffs Quealey are the owners of the fifth lot to the east numbered 17 Shawmut Street. Each lot is approximately forty-three feet deep and has a frontage of about sixteen feet. The passageway three feet wide, referred to in the bills, was laid out over the rear of the Sargeant lot and the three lots formerly owned by the defendants, and extended from Church Street to the Quealey lot. The defendants own the land on both sides of the passageway except the Sargeant land, and they own the fee in the passageway from the land of Sargeant and another to Church Street. Originally on each of the five lots there was a one-family brick dwelling, with a small garden in the rear from twelve to fourteen feet square. The right of way had existed for some time before 1867. In that year the city of Boston, acting under St. 1867, c. 308, condemned a tract of land consisting of about sixteen acres, including the land now owned by the parties to these suits, for the purpose of raising the level of the land and draining it in the interest of [493]*493the public health. After the improvements were made, the five lots above referred to were in 1869,1870 reconveyed by the city to their respective owners together with the preexisting rights of way which then continued to exist, and the land on the north side of the passageway was reconveyed to its owners without any rights in the passageway, none having existed prior thereto. The plaintiffs and the defendants trace their title to the grantees of the city of Boston. After the defendants acquired their land they razed the buildings thereon. The land of the plaintiffs is still occupied by the original dwellings.

The trial judge made the following findings: The way, which is forty feet and nine and three quarters inches in length, is suitable for foot passengers or for the carrying in of small articles for domestic needs. It is a back passage from Church Street to the back yards of the plaintiffs and is for those purposes which are ordinarily consistent with the use of a back passageway leading to kitchens or cellars. The owners of the land on the north side of the way had a right to build up to the line of the passageway and did so, but they had no interest in the way or right to pass over it. On the south side board fences were maintained by the owners of the several parcels to Church Street, who kept the way in suitable condition for travel. "There was considerable evidence as to a projection from the rear of the second floor of the building numbered 23 Shawmut Street over the way. The evidence was confined to the extent of the encroachment on the way. There was no evidence as to the history of this encroachment. Whether the owners of the estate numbered 23 built it under a claim of right or with the consent or acquiescence of the co-owners of the way did not appear. If material, I find that the projection from the estate numbered 23 was about eight feet wide and from a foot to a foot and a half over the way. The base of the projection was about ten feet above the way.”

It is admitted by the defendants in their answer and in the agreed statement of facts that they intend to erect a building upon their premises and to arch over the way. Before these suits were brought the defendants proposed to erect the [494]*494building in accordance with plans filed with the building department of the city of Boston, but they have been enjoined by the final decrees from building over the way at a height of less than seven feet above the original grade, except that the clearance of the opening and stairway at the Church Street end may be reduced to not less than six feet and ten and one-fourth inches. It is the contention of the plaintiffs that the defendants have no legal right to build over the way and that they (the plaintiffs) are entitled to have it kept open to the sky; but the judge found that “The increased light and air that they would get by having the passageway kept open to the sky would be negligible.”

The second paragraph of the final decree is as follows: “That the defendants may roof over said way, but they are permanently restrained and prohibited from roofing over said way at any height less than seven (7) feet above the grade of said way, as herein established, except that the clearance of the opening and stairway at the Church Street end of said way may be reduced to not less than six (6) feet ten and one quarter (10.25) inches.”

The question, whether the defendants have a right to build over the passageway, depends upon the terms of the grant by which it was created and the attendant circumstances. It was said in Crocker v. Cotting, 181 Mass. 146, at page 151: “Speaking generally, if a right of way is created, and nothing more appears from the deed or the attendant circumstances, the owner of the servient tenement may build over the way, or do anything else so long as he does not interfere with or obstruct the right of passage over the soil.” See also Atkins v. Bordman, 2 Met. 457; Burnham v. Nevins, 144 Mass. 88; Healey v. Smith Carriage Co. 265 Mass. 203. The burden is on the plaintiffs to prove that at the time of the creation of the way it was intended that it should be kept open to the sky. Duncan v. Goldthwait, 216 Mass. 402, 404.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 N.E. 233, 267 Mass. 490, 1929 Mass. LEXIS 1317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargeant-v-traverse-building-trust-mass-1929.