Wilson v. Massachusetts Institute of Technology

75 N.E. 128, 188 Mass. 565, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1229
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 128 (Wilson v. Massachusetts Institute of Technology) 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
Wilson v. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 75 N.E. 128, 188 Mass. 565, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1229 (Mass. 1905).

Opinions

Loring, J.

The contest here is on the application of well settled principles of law to new surroundings.

Counsel for both parties agree that it is not necessary to decide whether the effect of St. 1861, c. 183, was to convey to the two societies the fee in the square in question or only certain rights of occupation, the fee being retained in the Commonwealth. If we speak of the grant as one or the other, it will be for convenience only and not as expressing any opinion on this point.

We agree with the counsel for the defendant in their contention that if St. 1861, c. 183, was not intended to give to persons buying the surrounding lots under it the right here claimed by the plaintiffs, they cannot make out a case because of the form given to the transaction by the officers of the Commonwealth. If St. 1861, c. 183, was not intended to give such a right, such acts of these officers would not bind the Commonwealth on the principle lately enforced in Wormstead v. Lynn, 184 Mass. 425.

In construing this act the first fact and the most important consideration is that the grant to these two societies was not to cost the Commonwealth a penny, and that this was to be [580]*580effected by dealing with the square granted to the societies in such a way as so to enhance the value of the surrounding lots that they would yield as much as or more than the aggregate value the two had under the conditions prevailing before St. 1861, c. 188, was enacted. It is perhaps of some interest that this scheme was suggested to the Commonwealth by the petitioners for these grants, including among them the petitioners for the incorporation of the defendant.

It is stated in the report of the committee of the Legislature to whom these petitions for a grant of land were referred: “ According to the plan of the Memorialists, sufficient space is to be reserved to leave wide openings around the buildings of the societies.” And again: “Common experience shows that such open ornamental grounds surrounding the buildings, together with the attractive exterior of the latter, could not fail to increase the value of the adjacent lands, and to this extent would reimburse the treasury for the space withdrawn from sale. As regards the amount of this enhancing influence your committee have been furnished by the Memorialists with a large array of facts derived from the sales of lands on the Back Bay and other open parts of the city, going to show that improvements of the kind contemplated have been found in every case not only to hasten the sale and occupation of the adjacent lands, but to add very largely to their market value, making the net proceeds of the adjacent’lands in most cases as great or even greater than the value of the total area supposing no such reservation to have been made.”

St. 1861, c. 183, adopted to carry into effect this scheme of the “memorialists,” (including the defendant Institute,) provided (first) that the square in question “ shall be reserved from sale forever ” ; (second) “ and kept as an open, space, or for the use of ” the two societies; and (third) “ The above named societies shall not cover with their buildings more than one-third of the area granted to them respectively.” The plaintiffs contend that these declarations were addressed to the purchasers of the surrounding lots as the basis on which those lots were to be sold, and were made for the benefit of such purchasers; and that having bought on the faith of them these purchasers are entitled to have them specifically enforced.

[581]*581The defendant on the contrary insists that on a fair construction of the provisions of the act the Legislature intended to keep and did keep the control of all restrictions in its own hands, that the value of the surrounding lots was to be enhanced by the square in question being physically laid out before they were sold, and that the square was to continue in that condition so long as the Commonwealth, having regard to the interests of all concerned, should think it ought so to continue and no longer ; that St. 1903, c. 438, was an exercise of the control so reserved, and brought to an end as of right the advantages for which the purchasers of the surrounding lots paid an enhanced price.

When the defendant contends that in St. 1861, c. 183, the Legislature kept the control of the whole situation in its own hands, it relies on the fact that, having regard to the words “further conditions” in § 6, what are called “stipulations” in § 4 are really conditions, and being conditions the subject matters covered by them are matters between the Commonwealth and the grantees, and between them alone.

Were that the whole story the result would not necessarily follow. The fact that a provision in a deed is put in the form of a condition and in no other form, even when coupled with an express statement that the “non-fulfilment or breach . . . shall work a forfeiture of the estate hereby conveyed, and reinvest the same in the grantor,” is not decisive against its operating as an equitable restriction in addition to its operating as a common law condition. That was decided in Hopkins v. Smith, 162 Mass. 444, and is laid down in the recent case of Welch v. Austin, 187 Mass. 256, 258. The same principle would govern in case of a grant made by act of the Legislature.

The doctrine of Hopkins v. Smith is that in spite of the parties to a deed having put the thing agreed upon in the form of a common law condition and a common law condition only, the question whether it does not operate also as an equitable restriction is one of intention. The fact that the thing agreed upon has been put in the form of a common law condition, and in that form alone, is of itself a matter to be taken into consideration in arriving at the intention of the parties. But that fact has no greater or further effect. The opposite results severally reached in the cases of Peck v. Conway, 119 Mass. 546, and Clapp v. [582]*582Wilder, 176 Mass. 332, are examples of the application of this rule.

The cases of Episcopal City Mission v. Appleton, 117 Mass. 326, and Skinner v. Shepard, 130 Mass. 180, (as to which see Welch v. Austin, 187 Mass. 256, 259,). would raise an additional difficulty in construing the matters covered by § 4

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 128, 188 Mass. 565, 1905 Mass. LEXIS 1229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-massachusetts-institute-of-technology-mass-1905.