120 Ga. 760 | Ga. | 1904
The plaintiff in error complains that the court erred in sustaining a demurrer to a petition filed by him in the superior court of Laurens county. The petition alleged, substantially, that at one time A. I. Haines and M. W. Haines were the owners of a certain tract of land; that they sold petitioner a part of the tract; that a pond was located on the portion of the land purchased by the plaintiff, and that the said Haines consented for him to drain
It will be observed that plaintiff and defendant derived title from common grantors, viz. A. I. Haines and M. W. Haines. Plaintiff purchased first and cut the ditch with the consent of the owners of the land traversed by it before they sold to defendant. The consent of A. I. and M. W. Haines for plaintiff to drain his land across their land amounted to a license. Ordinarily, a license burdening real estate with a servitude is made by grant. It may be created by parol. When created by parol, the license is revocable unless the enjoyment of it is preceded necessarily by the expenditure of money and valuable improvements made in consequence of it. When the licensee, on the faith of a parol license from the owner of the fee, expends money and erects valuable and permanent improvements necessary to enjoy the license, he acquires an irrevocable right to all the privileges included in the license. Sheffield v. Collier, 3 Ga. 82; Mayor of Macon v. Franklin, 12 Ga. 239. The owner of a tenement, in licensing an adjoining land proprietor to enter upon his land to construct a ditch for draining the adjacent land of the licensee, consents to burdening his land with this servitude. If, on the faith of this consent, the ditch is dug, and other permanent improvements are made, the licence ripens into an easement. The' owner of the
Beversed.