This is a bill in equity brought to enforce certain
restrictions upon the use of the defendant’s land. The case was reserved by a judge of the Superior Court * for the determination of this court upon the pleadings, the agreed facts, and a summary of all the material evidence.
The evidence shows, that in 1847 the owners of a large tract of land in Cambridge caused it to be surveyed, divided into lots, and a plan thereof prepared, which was filed in the registry of deeds and is referred to as Plan 15.† Afterwards at various times the owners sold lots to different purchasers including lot No. 3, which was conveyed to one Randall in April, 1848, and was situated at the corner of North Avenue (now called Massachusetts Avenue) and Everett Street. The defendant is the owner of the front part of lot No. 3, having obtained title thereto by deed dated March 12, 1914. Many of the lots so sold were conveyed subject to restrictions that buildings erected thereon should set back a certain distance from the street line and that certain shops should not be erected nor maintained; but the restrictions were not uniform in all the deeds in which they were created. It appears that nearly one half of all the lots upon the entire tract which have been sold before and since the sale of lot No. 3 to Randall in 1848 were sold without any restrictions whatever. Still we do not undertake to determine the status of any lot except lot No. 3. The nature and extent of restrictions to which other lots may be subject need not be decided. It is undoubtedly true, however, that a general scheme may be found to exist even if certain lots are sold *558without restrictions, or if the restrictions imposed are not identical. Bacon v. Sandberg, 179 Mass. 396. Allen v. Barrett, 213 Mass. 36, 39. Hartt v. Rueter, ante, 207.
It appears that in the conveyance to Randall, the defendant’s predecessor in title, and in all subsequent deeds in the chain of title, including the deed to the defendant, no restrictions were imposed. There is nothing upon the plan which purports to restrict any of the lots shown thereon. In other words, there was nothing on the record in the registry of deeds to charge the defendant with notice that the lot, purchased by him, was subject to any restrictions whatever. Upon these facts, the defendant’s lot cannot be held to be subject to any restrictions for the benefit of the lots owned by the plaintiff. Beals v. Case, 138 Mass. 138. McCusker v. Goode, 185 Mass. 607. Roak v. Davis, 194 Mass. 481. Sprague v. Kimball, 213 Mass. 380. It is well settled that an easement in the nature of an equitable restriction cannot be imposed upon, land by paroi. R. L. c. 127, § 3. Sprague v. Kimball, supra.
The plaintiff contends that the recital in a mortgage given by the defendant’s predecessor in title, Randall, on November 5,, 1850, while he was the owner of the rear portion of lot No. 3, is-an acknowledgment by Randall of the existence of the restrictions, and “is sufficient not only to establish that he agreed to-these restrictions when he purchased this lot, but that the omission of the same from his deed was due to accident or mistake,” and that the principles stated in Sprague v. Kimball, supra, do not apply. If the deed to Randall omitted to refer to the restrictions and such omission was due to accident and mutual mistake,, the remedy of the grantors or those claiming under them is by a-bill to reform the deed, and cannot be considered in this proceeding. The Randall mortgage did not include the portion of lot. No. 3 owned by the defendant, but covered only the rear part of that lot. The recital is as follows: "subject to those convenient, restrictions heretofore imposed upon said land by deed of G. G. Hubbard et al., under whom I claim as by reference to the record thereof at said Registry will appear.” Aside from the fact that the mortgage did not cover the part of lot No. 3 owned by the defendant, the recital was of a fact which never existed. Apparently Randall believed that the lot was subject to the restrictions, but it is plain that he was mistaken. No owner of the lot in ques*559tian ever has created any restriction upon it, and the recital in the mortgage of a fact which did not exist cannot create such restrictions.
E. A. Whitman, (G. A. A. Pevey with him,) for the plaintiffs.
L. R. Eyges, for the defendant.
It is unnecessary to consider whether the statute of frauds would be a bar to the relief which the plaintiff seeks.
As the suit cannot be maintained, the entry must be
Bill dismissed.