10 N.M. 743 | N.M. | 1901
The civil law of Mexico .was the law in force in the Territory of New Mexico at the time of the execution and delivery of the contract made by Gold and Perea setting apart the lands and premises in question for the uses and purposes of the people of the city and county of Santa Fe, and to be used by them as a public street. This contract must, therefore, be tested by the rule which obtained in such matters under the civil law. McCracken v. Hayward, 2 How. 612.
A servitude is as well known to the civil law as an easement is to the common law; and servitudes were acquired, under the civil law, in the same manner as other property.
It is also laid down as one of the tenets of the civil law, that he who is the owner of a thing, and has the free administration of it, may grant a servitude; and that a servitude may be established on conditions and for a limited time. Schmidt’s Civil Law of Mexico, Arts. 376, 390, 394.
The civil law also provides that a servitude is extinguished by its voluntary relinquishment, or by the fulfillment of the condition upon which it depends. Schmidt’s Civil Law of Mexico, Art. 395, secs. 2, 4.
The contracting parties, Gold and Perea, granted only the right to use and pass over their property for street purposes, and nothing more, thereby creating a limited servitude. The contract did not convey a fee, but created a servitude under thé civil law, a right to pass over the lands of the grantors, along the strip specifically described, for street purposes. There can be no ambiguity or doubt touching the language used, and the maxim of the civil law need not be invoked which provides that, where doubt arises as to the meaning of a contract, the intentions of the parties are to govern, rather than the strict signification of the language employed.
The abandonment was supplemented, on the part of the city, not only by a conveyance of the premises to a third party, but by fencing it, and by its use and occupation for purposes inconsistent with its use as a public street. “Ceasing to use an easement, accompanied by an act clearly indicating an indention to abandon the right, has the same effect as a release.” Suydam v. Dunton, 84 Hun. 506.
The grant under the contract in question being only a civil law servitude or a common law easement, it follows that the fee to the fourteen and one-half feet remained in Gold and Perea, in the same proportions and to the same extent as it existed at the time of the making of the contract, to wit, five feet and eight inches in Gold, and eight feet and ten inches in Perea. The title which Gold had in the premises in question, and that adjoining the street on the east, having passed, by various mesne conveyances, to the plaintiff Staab, vested in Staab all of the title held by Gold in the street or alley-way, and no more. And notwithstanding several of these conveyances were bounded on the west by the street in question, it did not carry the boundary line to the center of the street, as the grantor could convey no more than that to which he held title. “A deed bounding upon a highway prima facie carries the title to the center of the road, unless it appears to have been owned by another, in which case the language found in the deed is satisfied by a title extended only to the roadside.” Hoag v. Pierce, 65 Hun. 424.
Gold’s title was limited as to boundary, on the west, by “the old wall of the heirs of Manuel Sanchez,” which appears as a stipulated fact herein, and as also appears by the deed from Gold to Zadoc Staab, the grantor of the plaintiff Staab herein. “Where the bed of an ancient road belongs to the government, a conveyance of land bounding thereon does not carry title to the center of the roadway.” Dunham v. Williams, 37 N. Y. 251.
Staab’s title is, therefore, limited by the description in the deed from Luis Gold to Zadoc Staab, wherein the premises are described as “including all the property lying between the old wall of the property of Probst Kirchner on the east, and the old wall of the property of the heirs of Manuel Sanchez, deceased, on the west, being the same property sold by William Breeden, master in chancery, under decree of the district court for said county of Santa Fe, on the eighteenth day of June, 1873.” This old wall was in the street five feet and eight inches, and to this extent Gold had title at the time he joined with Perea in the contract granting the servitude which authorized the city to open arid maintain the street in question. The description quoted* clearly limits the boundary of the premises on the west. “Where a deed describes the premises conveyed as the same land conveyed by a third person to the grantor, it conveys only the estate that the grantor derived from such third person.” Kennedy v. Farly, 82 Hum. 227.
The judgment herein will, therefore, be modified by changing so much of the description of the land therein described as fixes the width of the premises, at “seven feet and three inches,” to “five feet and eight inches;” and when so modified and changed, the judgment is in all things affirmed.