The rulings on both points were right. 1. The plaintiff acquired no title to the passage way in controversy by grant. The deed irom the Congregational Church and Society of Pitts Street to Clapp, dated on the 4th of April 1826, *480under which the plaintiff claims title, conveyed no right whatever, either of way or other easement, in or upon the land over which the right of passing is now claimed by the plaintiff. There is nothing in the deed to indicate the existence, at the time of the grant, of any passage way over the premises lying on the north and adjacent to those granted to Clapp. The northern boundary of the estate conveyed is described only as land of the grantors. There is certainly no express grant of a way, nor is there anything on which to raise a grant of one by implication.
2. The evidence offered at the trial did not establish a right of way in the plaintiff by prescription or adverse user. During the nine years, while the premises adjoining the alleged passage way now belonging to the plaintiff were owned by Clapp and occupied by his sister, from 1826 to 1835, the use of the land in controversy as a way to said premises was permissive only. The way was created and established by the deed to Davis, made on the same day with that to Clapp, and was declared to be only a right of way for the grantee, his heirs and assigns, in common with the proprietors of the church. To accomplish the purpose of this grant, the land over which the way was thus created was necessarily left open and uninclosed, and was used as a passage way by the proprietors and those who occupied the estate granted to Davis. Miss Clapp was one of the proprietors of the church and a member of the congregation during the period of her residence on the premises, as appurtenant to which the way by prescription is now claimed. The use she made of the way for the purpose of access to her house was perfectly consistent with the rights of the proprietors and of the owners of the adjoining estate on the west, who were by grant entitled to the use of that way. It did not interrupt or disturb in any degree their full enjoyment of the easement. It was therefore in no sense adverse, or under any such claim of right as to operate as evidence of a right, and not of a license. The adjudged cases in this commonwealth are decisive that no such use, however long continued, can ripen into a title. First Parish in Gloucester v. Beach, 2 Pick. 60, n. First Parish in Medford v. Pratt, 4 Pick 228. Kilburn v. Adams, 7 Met. 33. Exceptions overruled.
Metcalf, J. did not sit in this case.