Swensen v. Marino

29 N.E.2d 15, 306 Mass. 582, 130 A.L.R. 763, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 959
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 15 (Swensen v. Marino) 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
Swensen v. Marino, 29 N.E.2d 15, 306 Mass. 582, 130 A.L.R. 763, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 959 (Mass. 1940).

Opinion

Qua, J.

The plaintiff complains that the defendant has been using his right of way over the plaintiff’s land on Franklin Street in Holbrook illegally and in excess of the defendant’s rights by driving motor trucks at frequent intervals with heavy loads of sand and gravel from land west of the plaintiff’s land to Franklin Street.

Both parties apparently assume, and the master finds, that the defendant has a right of way appurtenant to his land over the plaintiff’s land to Franklin Street. The extent of this right is in dispute and is not determined by the notations of encumbrances upon the plaintiff’s registration certificate, for although it is there stated that the land is subject to the easement “of a drift way” set forth in a certain deed from Spear to Hobart in 1855, it is further stated that the “Right of Way” shown on the plan accompanying the certificate “is also subject to the rights of all those lawfully entitled thereto.” The master does not find that the defendant’s easement is in fact a “drift way” as described in the Spear-Hobart deed. It may be one of the “rights of all those lawfully entitled thereto” apart from that deed. These rights are not defined in the certificate of title.

The master does not set forth the precise origin of the defendant’s easement, so that its terms can be stated with accuracy, doubtless because the evidence was not such as to enable him to do so. He endeavors to ascertain the nature of the defendant’s rights from the nature of the actual use of the way for many years and from references in ancient deeds which he uses as evidence only and which need not be set forth in detail here.

Since it is the defendant who relies upon the easement, the burden rests upon him to show that his right is extensive' enough to authorize the amount and character of the use which he has made of the way. Hooten v. Barnard, 137 Mass. 36. Bigelow Carpet Co. v. Wiggin, 209 Mass. 542, 547, 551. Mt. Holyoke Realty Corp. v. Holyoke Realty Corp. 284 Mass. 100, 105.

The master finds that the way has been used for teaming cordwood and fence posts from the back land and at one [584]*584time for carting dressing to two or three gardens located there and carting out produce from them. "Some seventy-five years ago" sand was carted out "by horse and team” at the rate of “two or three loads every two or three years for a period of six or seven years.” More recently some peat and other material have been taken out. During the past few years a casual load of gravel has been taken out by truck. For two or three years before the defendant purchased the back land the way was not used at all and became overgrown with grass, brush and bushes, although it was still distinctly visible on the land. It is clear that during the many years of the existence of the way, its use was intermittent and generally infrequent, except perhaps when cordwood was being cut and carted off. The way is, however, the only present means of access to a large tract of land.

The master makes an ultimate finding as to the nature of the defendant’s right of way in these words: "Upon all the evidence I find that the right is impressed with the limitation that it must be used with reasonable regard to the comfort and enjoyment of the owner of the servient estate, and not in such manner as to disturb his peace or the value of his property.” Since the evidence in general is not reported, and this finding is not in conflict with subsidiary findings, it must stand, indefinite as it is, as a limitation upon the defendant’s rights. MacLeod v. Davis, 290 Mass. 335, 338. Dodge v. Anna Jaques Hospital, 301 Mass. 431, 435. Zak v. Zak, 305 Mass. 194, 196. But the finding must be construed fairly with the whole situation in mind. We do not think it means that every trifling disturbance of the plaintiff or the least possible detriment to his property is prohibited. A right of way so strictly limited could hardly be exercised at all. The sentence quoted should be balanced by implying the adverb "substantially” before the verb “to disturb.”

The master reports these further facts: After the defendant purchased the back land, about April 1, 1939, he widened the used portion of the way, including that part on the plaintiff’s premises, to a width sufficient for two [585]*585trucks to pass each other, and he placed gravel and sand upon it. By the time this suit was brought his sand and gravel operations had reached such proportions that thirty or forty truck loads passed out in a day, making from sixty to eighty trips out and in. This “perforce” raised “large clouds of dust,” diminished in some degree near the plaintiff’s house by the defendant’s use of calcium chloride upon the surface of the way. The trucks, “from the very nature of the mechanism,” make “a considerable amount of noise” in passing the plaintiff’s house. This use of the way has interfered with the comfortable enjoyment of the plaintiff’s premises. “The noise and dust ... is not a reasonable use of the way in consideration of the rights established in the original instance.” The defendant “has attempted to burden the servient estate to an unreasonable degree.” The plaintiff has “suffered a nuisance” from dust and noise.

Upon the facts found by the master the plaintiff is entitled to a decree. It is true that the defendant has established the existence of an easement in his favor which seems on the findings not to have been confined to use for any specified purpose or purposes, but within reasonable limits may be inferred to have comprehended general use as a way for purposes compatible with the nature of a tract of woodland separated from the public road, but subject to the limitations found by the master. We are not prepared to say that the defendant cannot haul out any sand or gravel, but on the findings the defendant’s present use of the way for the carrying on of a practically continuous business of mining sand and gravel on the wood lot exceeds any privilege shown to have been acquired, amounts to a new servitude, and overloads the easement. Atwater v. Bodfish, 11 Gray, 150, 152. Sargent v. Hubbard, 102 Mass. 380. Parks v. Bishop, 120 Mass. 340. Rowell v. Doggett, 143 Mass. 483. Baldwin v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 181 Mass. 166, 169. Randall v. Grant, 210 Mass. 302. Cornell-Andrews Smelting Co. v. Boston & Providence Railroad, 215 Mass. 381, 389.

We have not overlooked the general rule that when a [586]*586right of way arises by grant and not by prescription and is not limited by the terms of the grant, “it is available for the reasonable uses to which the dominant estate may be devoted.” Parsons v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 216 Mass. 269, 273. Anzalone v. Metropolitan District Commission, 257 Mass. 32, 36. The peculiarity of the case at bar is that the existence of a right of way of some kind is conceded, but no deed of grant has been identified by which to measure its terms. Indeed, so far as appears the right may have originated in prescription and not in grant. In a case like this the right cannot be assumed to be more extensive than the proof shows it to be.

The decree should not,, however, have limited the defendant’s use to that of a driftway. Strictly speaking, and as generally defined in the dictionaries, a driftway seems to be a way to be used for driving cattle. Ballard v. Dyson, 1 Taunt. 279.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 15, 306 Mass. 582, 130 A.L.R. 763, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swensen-v-marino-mass-1940.