Nelson Carpenter, being the owner of a tract of land in Warren, lying between Southbridge Street and Crescent Street, conveyed a part of it to the plaintiffs by a deed, in which the description is as follows: “ Commencing on the southerly side of the road leading towards Sturbridge, at the northeasterly corner of land sold by Nelson Carpenter to J. W. Hastings; thence running southerly by said land lately owned by said Hastings, and land of Frederic Brigham, one hundred and thirty-three feet; thence easterly seventy feet to a stake, thence northerly one hundred and thirty-three feet to^the aforesaid road; thence westerly on said road eighty-six feet to the first-mentioned bound; reserving to the said Nelson Carpenter, his heirs and assigns, the right to pass and repass, with loaded teams or otherwise, over the land herein conveyed, on the easterly line thereof, from the road aforesaid, to land of said Carpenter, situated southerly of the lot of land herein conveyed. This conveyance is made and accepted upon the express condition that grantees and their successors shall forever keep an open ditch on the westerly line of the premises herein conveyed, sufficient for the free passage of water from the land of said Carpenter adjoining.”
Carpenter afterwards made a conveyance to the defendant Hastings of a lot of 'land adjoining the plaintiffs’ lot, lying *517southeasterly of it, fronting on “ the road leading towards Sturbridge,” now called Southbridge Street, and being of about the same depth as the plaintiffs’ lot. The defendants claim the right to use the way reserved as above stated as a means of access to this lot; and the only question in the case is whether the right reserved to pass and repass is appurtenant to the lot of the defendant Hastings.
It is true, as claimed by the defendants, that if, by the terms of the reservation, the way was made appurtenant to the whole remaining land of the grantor, Carpenter, it would remain appurtenant to every parcel of it, if Carpenter afterwards divided it into lots. Whitney v. Lee, 1 Allen, 198. Miller v. Washburn, 117 Mass. 371. But we are of opinion that this reservation does not create a right of way which is appurtenant to the whole of the remaining land of the grantor. It does not reserve the right to pass and repass to the remaining or adjoining land of the grantor, which would be the natural form of expression if he had intended that the way should be appurtenant to the whole of his remaining land. It reserves “the right to pass and repass, with loaded teams or otherwise, over the land herein conveyed, on the easterly line thereof, from the aforesaid road to land of said Carpenter, situated southerly of the lot of land herein conveyed,” thus indicating that the way was for the benefit, not of the whole of his remaining land, but of such part of it only as comes within the desci’iption of his land “ situated southerly of the lot of land herein conveyed.” The lot of the defendant Hastings does not fairly come within this description. It lies southeasterly of the front part of the plaintiffs’ lot, but no part of it falls southerly of the whole lot.
It is clear that Carpenter, when he made his deed to the plaintiff, did not know the exact points of the compass. He treats the lot as lying on the southerly side of the road; he regards the side lines as running northerly and southerly, and the front and rear lines as running easterly and westerly. In his mind, the lot which he afterwards sold to the defendant Hastings was easterly, and not southerly, of the plaintiffs’ lot. When he restricted the right of way to his land situated “southerly” of the lot conveyed, he intended to indicate the position of such land in relation to the plaintiffs’ lot, and meant *518his land which was geographically situated south of the rear line of the lot. See Cronin v. Richardson, 8 Allen, 423. Other parts of the deed fortify this view. The way intended is described as a way “over the land herein conveyed, on the easterly line thereof from the road,” which points to a way along the easterly line to the rear line of the lot. The deed shows, that, when the grantor intended to reserve a right or privilege for the benefit of the whole of his remaining land, he knew how to do so; as in the provision for a ditch, which is to be kept open “ sufficient for the free passage of water from the land of said Carpenter adjoining,” thus including the whole of the remainder of his land. It may also be noted that there was no occasion for reserving a right of way in favor of the lot of the defendant Hastings, as it had its own front upon the road.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the defendants have not, by virtue of the reservation in question, any right of way over the plaintiffs’ land, and that the ruling of the Superior Court was right.
Exceptions overruled.