Hartshorn v. Inhabitants of South Reading
Hartshorn v. Inhabitants of South Reading
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff rests his case.upon two grounds. 1. That the inclosure of the common by the defendants has shut up, and deprived him of the use of, a highway, and has caused him a peculiar and special injury thereby, different from that sustained by the community at large; and 2. That it has interfered with the enjoyment of certain easements appurtenant to his land abutting upon the common, and thus occasioned a private nuisance to his estate for which he is entitled to equitable relief.
The first ground cannot be maintained, according to the well settled doctrines of this court. The plaintiff’s land does not abut upon the highway described; and although from its proximity his occasion to use it is more frequent, and the inconvenience to him from its obstruction greater, than that which all other persons desiring to travel over it have or experience, this is a difference in degree only, and not in kind. He is merely disabled from going upon and using it as a highway, a disability common to the whole community; and the remedy is by indictment. Brainard v. Connecticut River Railroad, 7 Cush. 506. Harvard College v. Stearns, 15 Gray, .
The obstruction of the enjoyment of a private easement stands on a different footing; and for a permanent and continuous injury, occasioned by such an obstruction, a bill in equity undoubtedly furnishes an appropriate remedy.
The plaintiff alleges the existence of such an easement appurtenant to his land, under a vote of the town of Reading passed in 1741, and recited in the bill; and the nature and extent of this easement is the chief subject of controversy between the parties. That vote was as follows : “ That all the common lands ” [a description of which is given,] “ shall continue to lie' unfenced as they are,” [with a slight exception mentioned,] “ for the use of the old parish, for highways, a training field, and burying-place, and the more common coming at the pond with flax and creatures, and also to accommodate the neighbors that live bordering on said lands, for their, more convenient coming at and improving their own lands and buildings ; all the aforesaid lands to remain unfenced as they now are, and to the use
The old parish, which was the first parish in Reading, was a territorial parish which in 1812 was incorporated as the town of South Reading. The tract of land described in the vote of 1741 was crossed by two highways, and continued unfenced until the time of the filing of this bill, when the town of South Reading, having previously voted to do so, proceeded to inclose the central part of the tract, leaving, however, a space all round the inclosure sufficient for a convenient way, and for access to the pond, and for coming at and improving the lands bordering upon the common.
It is not necessary for the decision of this case to determine the precise effect of the vote of 1741, in relation to the title of the common land in question. Whether that vote would convey the fee of the land would be at best doubtful, and might depend upon facts not fully presented by the demurrer to the bill. Green v. Putnam, 8 Cush. 21. The grant was hardly such an one as the parish could take in its parochial capacity, and it seems to have been rather intended as an appropriation by the town of its land to certain uses, without any grant of the land itself, for the accommodation of the inhabitants of that locality, perhaps in reference to a probable division of the town at some future period. A burying-ground is not usually so much a parochial as a municipal charge; and a training field and highways do not come within the class of objects contemplated in the organization of a parish. If all the facts were presented it might very likely be found that this vote of the town of Reading was one of several votes passed in the same year, respecting the use and disposition of its common lands lying in different parts of the town, the construction and intent of which were considered by this court in the case of Bachelder v. Wakefield, 8 Cush. 243. It appeared in that ease that in March 1807 the town voted to confirm the title of each parish to the common lands lying within their respective limits.
But whether the original grant be regarded as a conveyance
The case of Emerson v. Wiley, 10 Pick. 310, does not conflict with the conclusion to which we have come. In that case the defendant pleaded a right of way in all directions over the plaintiff’s close, and the jury found that he was entitled to such a way. The plaintiff’s close was a part of the common land described in the vote of 1741 above recited, and immediately adjoining the defendant’s land ; and the plaintiff claimed under a deed irom the parish. But by inclosing the plaintiff’s land, the defendant was wholly deprived of the privilege of fronting and bounding upon the common. That privilege belonged to his whole front line; and neither the plaintiff nor the parish could cut him off from it in any direction. There was nothing in the case to raise any question as to the right of the parish or the town to inclose the burying-ground or training field, if a reasonable portion of the common were left for access to the adjoining lands, and to the pond.
At the request of the parties, we have decided this case upon the substantial merits of the title on which the plaintiff relies, without regard to the technical effect of the demurrer in respect to the formal averments contained in the bill.
Demurrer sustained, md bill dismissed
Reference
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- John F. Hartshorn v. Inhabitants of South Reading
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