The deed, under which the plaintiff claims, describes the lots of land conveyed by it as bounded, on one side, on a private way or street, twenty-five feet wide. It also refers to a plan which shows the general course and limits of the street, *541The defendants, who were his grantors, owned the adjacent land described in the deed as the way or street.
It was held in Parker v. Smith, 17 Mass. 413, and also in several more recent cases, that such a form of expression in a deed is “ not merely a description, but an implied covenant that there is such a street.” It has also been decided that the descriptive words as to the street, particularly if the deed refers to an accompanying plan of lots and streets, are not to be understood merely as signifying that the street in question is coextensive with the lot conveyed, but that its extent, direction and termini are to be such as are delineated on the plan or otherwise indicated by the deed. Thomas v. Poole, 7 Gray, 83. But even under the rule adopted in Parker v. Smith, the description of a street as a boundary was not understood to be an assurance or implied covenant that it had been constructed, and put into a condition for present use as a passageway. Loring v. Otis, 7 Gray, 563. Still less would it impose upon the grantor any obligation to proceed to grade and construct it at his own expense. The most that could be said would be, that it amounted to an appropriation, or setting apart, of a portion of the adjacent land, to that use.
But in the recent case of Howe v. Alger, 4 Allen, 206, the subject has been carefully and ably reexamined by Mr. Justice Dewey, and on a review of the decisions it is now established that “ the whole extent of the doctrine is, that a grantor of land, describing the same by a boundary on a street or way, if he be the owner of such adjacent land, is estopped from setting up any claim, or doing any acts, inconsistent with the grantee’s use of the street or way.” Under this rule, it is difficult to find in the plaintiff’s deed anything, in relation to the street, that can be said to be in the nature of an executory contract, which could ue the proper subject for a decree for specific performance. In one sense the deed operates as a conveyance of a right of way over the street; that is -to say, the grantors and all claiming under them are estopped to deny the existence of the street, or do any act inconsistent with the plaintiff’s use of it as such. But the plaintiff’s right is in the nature of an executed grant» *542He holds under a conveyance which has taken full effect, and which contains no stipulation or assurance that the grantors are to do anything, at any time after the date of the deed, to add to what has been actually conveyed, or to render it more effective.
It will be found, on examination of the cases, that the question, as to the rights of the grantee in a street named in a deed as a boundary, is usually raised in an action of tort, brought by one of the parties against the other, for erecting or removing a fence or other obstruction in the way. No case has been pointed out to us in which an action has been maintained against the grantor on the ground that such a deed is substantially a covenant or promise to open and maintain a street. The plaintiff’s rights can be vindicated in some form of action, but he is not entitled to the remedy which he seeks by this bill.
Bill dismissed.