Stone v. Stone
Stone v. Stone
Opinion of the Court
This is a bill in equity to redeem from a mortgage certain land lying partly in the Charlestown District of the city of Boston and partly in Everett. The land was bought in 1854 from the city of Charlestown by Phineas and Amos Stone and three other persons named Gary, Howland, and Sewall. The interests of the several purchasers were originally — Gary, one quarter; Howland, one quarter; Sewall, Phineas and Amos Stone, one sixth each. In 1860, Howland sold his one quarter interest to Phineas and Amos Stone and Sewall, and thereafter each of the remaining purchasers, namely, Gary, Sewall, and the two Stones, had each of them one undivided quarter interest in the land.
The land was originally paid for by a mortgage back to the city of Charlestown for the whole purchase money, one half of which was due in five years and the other in ten years. The half due in five years was paid at maturity, in June, 1859; the other half, amounting to $11,919.75, is still unpaid. In June, 1891, the defendant, Joseph Stone, became the purchaser and assignee of this mortgage.
Phineas and Amos Stone were brothers. Phineas died in August, 1891, leaving the defendant Joseph Stone, his oldest son, his residuary legatee and devisee. About four years after his father’s death, Joseph produced a release from Amos to Phineas Stone, dated February 1, 1880, which he said he had just found among his father’s papers, and claimed that by it Amos had conveyed to Phineas all his interest in the land in question. The release was throughout in the handwriting of Amos Stone, and had never been recorded. Acting on this
One Abby M. Andrews, who was the clerk of Phineas during his lifetime, was coexecutor with Joseph under Phineas’ will. She told Joseph that Amos owned one quarter of the property in question, and in the inventory of the estate of Phineas Stone it was stated that he owned one quarter of this property and not one half of it. Abby Andrews died two months before the release dated February 1, 1880, was recorded. Joseph was unable to testify definitely as to the time when he found this release, but it was shortly before it was recorded.
It appears that no change was made in the division of the net income of the property after the date of the release of February 1, 1880, but that after that date, as before it, one quarter of the net income was paid to Amos; and this continued for the eleven years after the date of the release during which Phineas was alive and during the four additional years after his death until his clerk, Abby M. Andrews, died, making fifteen years in all. Joseph’s story is that he found the release among some papers in an ordinary docket box on his desk; that the box and the papers had been there since they were taken out of the safe where they were kept by Phineas, and handed to him by Miss Andrews in 1891, and that he had examined these papers several times before 'he found out what the purport of this release was.
When this estate was purchased from the city of Charlestown, the title to it was taken in the name of Gary. At that time, all the purchasers except Gary were members of the city government of Charlestown, and the defendant in his brief admits that “ possibly ” this was the reason for none of the purchasers except Gary appearing as grantees. Gary held the title for one year, namely, until June, 1855, when he conveyed to Howland the legal title to his (Howland’s) one quarter interest; and one year later, namely, in May, 1856, he conveyed to Phineas Stone the. legal title to the one undivided half of the estate bought by
When Howland sold his one quarter interest to Sewall and the two Stones, in 1860, he conveyed the legal title to it to Amos Stone. Three years later, in October, 1863, Amos conveyed one third of this one quarter to Sewall and one third to Phineas.
These are the only deeds on record, and the defendant now claims, not only that Amos conveyed to Phineas all his interest by the unrecorded release dated February 1, 1880, but also that all the interest Amos had at that time to convey was an undivided one twelfth interest, namely, the interest which was left in him, Amos, under the conveyance to him by Howland of Howland’s one quarter interest after Amos had conveyed away one third of that one quarter to Phineas and the same interest to Sewall.
The master found that Amos had one quarter interest before he executed the release of February 1, 1880, and ruled-that that interest passed to Phineas by virtue of that release. The presiding justice affirmed this finding as to the one quarter interest, but ruled that the release did not apply to the land in question at all, and entered a decree allowing the plaintiffs to redeem.
The finding that Amos, after 1860 and prior to February, 1880, had one quarter interest was right.
In the deed from Amos to Phineas by which Amos conveyed to him his (Phineas’) one twelfth interest which Phineas bought of Howland, the legal title to which had been conveyed to Amos by Howland at the time of the purchase three years before, it is stated that Amos conveys “ one undivided third part of the several parcels of land flats and rights pertaining thereto, situate,” etc. (describing the land in question, among bther parcels) ; the deed then continues as follows: “meaning and intending hereby to convey to said Phineas J. Stone so much of said parcels and rights that was conveyed to me by said Howland as aforesaid, as will make him the said Phineas J. Stone together with what was conveyed to him by John Gary by deed dated May 1, 1856 recorded as above Book 751, Page 274, the owner of one undivided fourth part of the several parcels of land, fiats and rights
If such a deed had been made, it is not improbable that Amos would not have recorded it. It is evident that these purchasers arranged the subsequent conveyances between themselves so that ■ the fact, which they concealed at the outset, would remain hidden, namely, the fact that they, while members of the city government of Charlestown, had sold this tract of land to themselves and Gary. It is evident that it was for this reason that Gary held the whole legal title for a year and then conveyed one quarter to Howland; and that it was not until a year after that, that is to say, two years after the purchase was made, that Gary conveyed one half to Phineas; and not until two months after Phineas got this one half, that he conveyed one sixth to Sewall; and again, when in October, 1860, six years after the original purchase, Howland sold his one quarter to Phineas, Amos, and Sewall, it was evidently for this reason that a conveyance of the whole one quarter was made to Amos, and that it was not until three years after that, namely, in October, 1863, that Amos dared to convey to Phineas and Sewall their shares of this one
In addition to this, it appears that for thirty-five years, namely, from 1860 to 1895, Amos received one quarter of the net income of the estate, and in the settlements of the income which were made was recognized by all interested, time and again, as owning one quarter of the property. One piece of evidence in this connection is of sufficient importance to be singled out and stated at length: In February, 1891, six months before. Phineas died, this very defendant, Joseph Stone, wrote a letter to the park commissioners of the city of Boston, in which he said that he was “ duly authorized by the owners, Phineas J. Stone, one-quarter interest; Amos Stone, one-quarter interest; heirs of Moses B. Sewall, five in number, one-quarter interest; heirs of John Gary, five in number, one-quarter interest,” to offer a portion of this land for sale to them, and did offer to sell it to them on terms therein stated. And finally, it was not until four years after Phineas died and two months after the death of Phineas’ clerk, that the claim was made that Amos did not own one quarter. In view of all these facts, we are of opinion that the statement in the deed from Amos to Phineas, dated October 6, 1863, that Phineas had one sixth interest prior to the date of that deed, must be taken to be correct, and that such a deed from Phineas to Amos was made, and subsequently lost.
The defendant relies in this connection on the finding of the master that “ Joseph showed this deed [of February 1, 1880] to Amos, who did not attempt-to repudiate it or deny that it applied to the property which is the subject of this suit.” The defendant, Joseph Stone, testified that within a short time after he found the release of February 1, 1880, “ I showed him that release, and asked him what it meant, and he said, ‘ I don’t know.’ I said, ‘ That is your signature.’ He said, 6 Yes,’ and I said, ‘ You made it out,’ and he said, 6 Yes, I made it out,’ and then said, 11 don’t remember about it.’ ” Later this defendant testified that this was in May, 1895. Amos died in February, 1896.
The defendant also relies in this connection upon the release dated February 1, 1880; he relies on that release, not only as a conveyance of Amos’ one quarter interest, but also as a statement that Amos never became entitled to any part of the one half conveyed to Phineas by Gary, and for that reason that it cannot be found as a fact that a deed for one sixth interest was made and has been lost; and he contends that this should control the facts which we have referred to.
This contention cannot be disposed of without a full consideration of the release dated February 1, 1880, and we shall now consider that release with respect to both aspects of it, which we have just stated.
The release recites that whereas P. J. Stone “ is possessed of a certain parcel of real estate situate on Medford Street,” in the Charlestown District of the city of Boston, describing it, and “ also one other parcel of land situate partly in the town of Everett, in the County of Middlesex and Commonwealth aforesaid, and partly in said Charlestown District, conveyed to him [Phineas J. Stone] by John Gary of said Charlestown District, being an undivided half part of the estate conveyed to said Gary by the City of Charlestown by deed dated December 19, 1854, recorded in Middlesex Registry, So. District, Book 701 Page 12. Now therefore the said P. J. Stone did verbally agree to and with Amos Stone, now of said Everett that if he the said Amos Stone would pay one-half of the purchase money
The defendant contends that the verbal promise referred to in this release was the promise to hold for Amos one third of the one half conveyed to Phineas by Gary, and that this is a statement by Amos that he had failed to pay his share of the original purchase money and of the subsequent improvements made on the premises, and, as has been said, that the deed operated, not only to release Phineas from his verbal promise as to the one third of the one half, but also to convey to him (Phineas) the one twelfth left in Amos under the deed of one quarter to him from Howland after he bad conveyed one third of that one quarter to Phineas and a like interest to Sewall. '
“ The estate conveyed to said Gary by the City of Charles-town by deed dated December 19 1854 recorded in Middlesex Registry, So. District, Book 701 Page 12,” mentioned in the release of February 1, 1880, was not the land which the plaintiffs seek to redeem in this bill. The land which the plaintiffs seek to redeem is that described in the deed from the city of Charles-town to Gary, dated June 1, 1854, and acknowledged June 26, 1854, being the same premises described in the mortgage of the same date from Gary to Charlestown to secure his two notes of $11,919.75 each. The land conveyed by the city of Charles-town by the deed dated December 19, 1854, was in addition to that conveyed by the deed of June 1, 1854. The land conveyed by the deed of June 1, 1854, consisted of five parcels on the westerly side of Malden Bridge on the northerly bank of the Mystic River, and were situate in part in Everett and in part in the Charlestown District of Boston; and of one parcel lying on the east side of Malden Bridge. According to the plan
The additional conveyance from the city of Charlestown to Gary made by deed dated December 19,1854, came about in the following way: On August 8, 1853, Gary made a petition to the city of Charlestown, in which he stated that he was “ desirous of purchasing of the city, all that part of the Alms House Estate, lying on the east side of the road, also, the flats upon the west side of the road, or such part of the same as the City Council may be disposed to sell.” The land originally conveyed to Gary by the deed of June'l, 1854, was part of the almshouse estate of the city of Charlestown. In pursuance of that petition, the city of Charlestown, by deed of December 19,1854, recorded Book 701, Page 12, being the deed referred to in the release of February 1, 1880, conveyed to Gary for a nominal consideration “ all the right title and interest which said City has in and to , the land and flats which formerly belonged to the Penny Ferry which lie easterly of and adjoining to Malden Bridge and the streets and abutments leading thereto and southerly of the following described line, [then follows a description of the southeasterly boundary line of the Penn^ Ferry lot as conveyed by the deed of June 1,1854] meaning and intending to quitclaim to said Gary all the land and flats if any there be, which formerly belonged to said Penny Ferry situated southerly of said line above described and easterly of said Bridge and the said
In 1640, Charlestown “ established, and for more than a century afterwards maintained, a ferry at this place, known as Penny Ferry. In 1648 the town ordered 6 the ways to be made passable for people to go to the boats at the low. water mark,’ and-that there should be a causeway made at the ferry.” Gerrish v. Gary, 120 Mass. 132, 133. J. F. Fuller testified, in Gerrish v. Gary, that in 1858, he assisted his father, S. P. Fuller, in making a survey of the premises; that the old causeway of the Penny Ferry was then visible, and that it extended one hundred and one feet below low water mark. This is shown on Plan C, admitted in evidence in this case as the plan made by S. P. and J. F. Fuller, referred to in Gerrish v. Gary. It may be assumed that this extension of the Penny Ferry causeway below low water mark was made in pursuance of the order made by the town in 1648, directing “ the ways to be made passable for people to go to the boats at the low-water mark,” and that the extension was used for landing passengers at low tide by bringing the ferry-boat alongside this extension of the causeway when the tide was out. The maintenance of this causeway, even below low water mark, gave to the owner a prescriptive title, at least to the causeway, even as against the Commonwealth. Nichols v. Boston, 98 Mass. 39. It was not until 1867. that the present statutory provision prohibiting the obtaining of a prescriptive title against the Commonwealth to flats below low water line was enacted. St. 1867, c. 275. Pub. Sts. c. 196, § 11. It is evident that one of the purposes of this conveyance was to convey to Gary the title of the city to the flats covered by the causeway below low water mark. This conveyance was followed by a grant from the Legislature to build a wharf over ninety-six of these one hundred and one feet; St. 1856, c. Ill; and it appears that in the years 1857 and 1858 a pile wharf was built on these flats, by the five purchasers, extending ninety-six feet beyond the end of the Penny Ferry lot mentioned in the deed of June 1, 1854. These flats were' north of the boundary line between Charlestown and Malden, were wholly in Charlestown, and passed to Gary under the deed of December 19, 1854.
The claim to ownership of these flats now made by the defendant Stone and his associates was made when the Metropolitan Sewerage Commission took about half an acre of them, lying in the town of Everett on the southeasterly side of the boundary line between Boston and Everett. On this land being taken, the defendant, Joseph Stone, claiming to own one undivided half interest therein, and the heirs of Gary and Sewall, claiming to own one quarter interest each, brought a petition stating that the flats were owned by them in fee, and asking to have their damages assessed and paid. The defendant, Joseph Stone, claims that the decision in Gerrish v. Gary is fatal to the theory of the plaintiff that the deed of December 19, 1854, covered flats southeasterly of the Old Penny Ferry lot, and he bases this contention on the ground that “ that case expressly decides (both Amos and P. J. Stone being parties) that the boundary line upon the east” is the line of the old Penny Ferry lot, and is the line described in the deed of June 1,1854. We are of opinion, however, that Gerrish v. Gary is not fatal to this contention. Gerrish v. Gary was a case in which the proprietor of the upland adjoining the land conveyed by the deed of June 1, 1854,
The land described in the amended declaration in Gerrish v. Gary was triangular in shape and was bounded on the southeast by the southeasterly boundary line of the Penny Ferry lot given in the deed of June 1,1854; on the west, by low water mark, and on the north by the line run according to the general rule at right angles with the general course of the shore. The issue in that case was whether the land described in the writ belonged to the demandant. It was held that it did not. The question in that case was whether the line drawn at right angles to the general course of the shore, or the boundary of the Penny Ferry lot, was the line of division of the flats at this point, and it was decided that it was the latter. The demandant assumed that the southeasterly boundary of the Penny Ferry lot given in the deed of June 1,1854, was the boundary of that lot, and that that lot did not extend beyond that line, and that no flats beyond that line were conveyed by the deed of December 19, 1854; and demanded the flats lying northwest of that line only. It was held that the flats demanded belonged to the tenant. It is consistent with that decision that the tenant owned more on the southeast than the demandant claimed in his writ, because the true boundary of the Penny Ferry lot was not that given in the deed of June 1,1854; the true boundary of the Penny Ferry lot on the southeast was not in issue, and for that reason it may at least be doubted whether the statement by the court in Gerrish v. Gary as to the boundary line on the southeast is decisive of the rights ■ of the parties. However that may be, it appears from the original papers in Gerrish v. Gary that John Gary was the sole person impleaded as tenant, and that Amos and Phineas Stone were not parties to that suit. The writ is dated October 3, 1864, and on October 3,1864, Gary owned only one quarter of the land conveyed to him by the city of Charlestown in 1854, and the
This disposes of the defendant’s main contention, that the release of February 1, 1880, applies to the land conveyed by the deed of June 1, 1854; his main contention on that point was that the land described in the deed of December 19, 1854, was not described as lying in Charlestown and in Everett, while the land described in the deed of June 1, 1854, was so described. When it is established that part of the flats covered by the deed of December 19, 1854, were in fact in Charlestown, and that the grantees still claim that flats in Everett did pass under it, that argument falls to the ground.
The other grounds on which the defendant contends that' the release of 1880 covers the land described in the deed of June 1, and not that described in the deed of December 19, are : First, that it is a parcel formerly conveyed by Gary to P. J. Stone; but that is equally true of both parcels; the deed of May 1, 1856, conveys to Phineas one undivided half of the land conveyed by the deed of June 1,1854, and also one undivided half of the land and flats conveyed by the deed of December 19, 1854. Second, that it is a parcel formerly conveyed by the city of Charlestown to Gary; that is equally true of both parcels. Third, that the release speaks of purchase money being paid and of improvements made; so far as the release of February 1, 1880, implies that there was separate purchase money for the land described in the deed of December 19, 1854, it does not fit the facts; so far as improvements are concerned, we have already alluded to the pile wharf built outside of low water mark in the years 1857 and 1858; that was an improvement on land covered by the deed of December 19,1854. Fourth, it is argued that the land conveyed by the deed of December 19,
Stone did not own half the land described in the deed of December 19, 1854, at the date of the release in 1880. That is true; but it is equally true that he did not own one half the land covered by the deed of June 1, 1854. He had conveyed at least one third of one half of the land and flats covered by both deeds to Sewall, and that deed in terms covers both the land conveyed by the deed of June 1 and the land conveyed by the deed of December 19.
This case is not like the cases of Cassidy v. Charlestown Five Cents Savings Bank, 149 Mass. 325; Dow v. Whitney, 147 Mass. 1; Lovejoy v. Lovett, 124 Mass. 270, relied on by the defendant. In those cases, a parcel of land is described at length, and then follows a clause stating in substance that they are the same premises as those described in a prior deed, which deed did not convey the premises described. In this case, on the contrary, the only description of the land conveyed is that it is the land covered by the prior deed.
If any of the matters to which we have adverted make the deed of December 19,1854, ambiguous, then the question arises whether the improbability of Amos conveying his interest in the flats covered by the deed of December 19, 1854, and keeping his interest in the land conveyed by the deed of June 1, 1854, is so great as to overcome the other facts in evidence, namely,
(4) that in 1891, the defendant Joseph, being duly authorized by the owners, Phineas J. Stone one quarter interest, Amos Stone one quarter interest, and others, offered a part of this land for sale — the question whether, under these circumstances, it would be held that the release of February 1,1880, ever took effect, is not now before the court. What is before the court is, Whether, on all the evidence, there is enough to overcome the express provision in the release of February 1, 1880, that it applies to the land described in the deed of December 19, 1854; and we are of opinion that there is not.
For the same reasons, we are of opinion that the recitals in the release of February, 1880, do not overcome the conclusion which we have heretofore stated, that between May, 1856, and . October, 1868, Phineas made a deed to Amos of his one third of the one half of the legal title which was conveyed to Phineas by Gary. In the first place, the verbal agreement recited in the release of February, 1880, does not fit the facts; that is an agreement by Phineas to convey “ an undivided half part of his interest” on Amos paying “ one-half of the purchase money ” ; that is to say, on Amos paying one half of the purchase money for one half, he is to convey one half of one half. So far as the half interest conveyed to Phineas by Gary is concerned, Amos was to have one third, and although ultimately Amos was to have one quarter, that one quarter was not to be carved out of an interest conveyed to Phineas; one quarter of the whole was conveyed to Amos by Howland, and after he conveyed to Phineas and Sewall one twelfth each, he had one twelfth left in himself which, together with Amos’ one third of the one half conveyed to Phineas made up his one quarter. In the second place, in February, 1880, Phineas was not possessed of one half, under any possible theory; he had the legal title to five twelfths
For these reasons, in view of the facts already dwelt on at length, we are of opinion that the release of February 1, 1880, if it ever took effect at all, applied to the flats covered by the deed of December 19, 1854, and not to the land described in the deed of June 1,1854.
Order overruling defendants’ exceptions to the master’s report and decree for the plaintiffs affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jasper W. Stone & others, trustees, & others v. Joseph Stone, trustee, & others
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