Court Opinion

ID: 6416419
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:56:30.209764+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:34.512762
License: Public Domain

Colt, J.
The defendant claims to own an undivided two thirds of the fee on Gloucester Place, subject to the easements in it; and, as such owner, to have the right to use it for access to his other land, or for any other purpose not inconsistent with the easements imposed upon it. His title depends upon the construction to be given to the partition which was macre by the court between the tenants in common of the estate through which this Way was located by the commissioners.
The commissioners of partition, in their return to the court, after describing by bounds the whole estate, declare that they have proceeded to divide and apportion it, using in reference to the way in question the following language : “ In the first place, we appropriate a strip of land in the middle of said estate twenty-eight feet wide and one hundred and ninety-three feet long, as laid down on the plan hereto annexed, drawn by Alexander Wadsworth, and which forms a part hereof, as a 'reet oi pas* *556sageway, to be held in common and undivided by the said parties, abutters thereon, their heirs and assigns forever.” They then go on to assign specific portions to each petitioner, giving the length of the lines and bounding each on the passageway.
The defendant .claims that the effect of this was to leave the undivided fee in Gloucester Place in the parties to the partition as tenants in common, subject to an easement in favor of the owners of lots bounding thereon ; and relies on the case of Morgan v. Moore, 3 Gray, 319.
On the other hand, the plaintiff claims that the whole parcel of land described in the warrant of the commissioners was divided ; and the strip in question was appropriated as a way to the other parts of the land, so that it became parcel of each part of the land set off, could be put to no other use, and was conveyed, when the proprietors conveyed the parts set off to them, as parcel thereof. And this, we think, is substantially the true construction of the return. It is a question of intent as expressed in the language used, applied to the subject matter and the duty with which the commissioners were charged.
In the construction of deeds, where lands are bounded on or by a way, either public or private, the law presumes it to be the intention of the grantor to convey the fee of the land to the centre of the way, if his title extends so far. This presumption is of course controlled, whenever there are words used in the description showing a different intention. But it has been held that-giving measurement, in the deed, of side lines, which reach only to the outer line of the way, are not alone sufficient to overcome it. Phillips v. Bowers, 7 Gray, 21. Fisher v. Smith, 9 Gray, 441. Codman v. Evans, 1 Allen, 443.
This rule of interpretation applies, with more force, to a return of commissioners of partition, which has been confirmed by the court, when the way located by them is wholly upon the land which by the warrant they are required to divide The return itself here shows that the commissioners intended to perform the whole duty required, so that the parties should not be left tenants in common of any part of the original estate. The difficult arises from the statement that the strip of land appropriated fa$ *557a street or way was to be held in common and undivided, by the abutters thereon. But it was clearly within their power to create a new incorporeal estate, such as a right of way over a part of the land divided, to be enjoyed in common, after the partition, by all the owners. This they did; and the tenancy in common which they created and intended to describe was a tenancy only in the easement, and not in the soil. To hold otherwise would make their proceedings imperfect. The right of way secured was doubtless the main consideration, for there could be little value in the undivided interest of a tenant in common in the strip, of land subject to it, independent of the ownership of the adjoining lots. Such tenant in common could not, without the consent of his co-tenants, create any servitude or easement therein in favor of his other estates. 3 Kent Com. (6th ed.) 436. Miller v. Miller, 13 Pick. 237. De Witt v. Harvey, 4 Gray, 486, 494.
The case of Morgan v. Moore, 3 Gray, 319, differs from this in the fact that the lots set off did not bound, as in this, all upon the street as laid out; and in the further important consideration, that the partition was by deed, and therefore lacked the presumption, which arises here, that the proceedings confirmed by the court were intended and understood to be a complete division of all the estate held in common.
The demurrer in the defendant’s answer for want of equity in the bill was not insisted upon at the argument.

Decree for the plaintiff, with costs.