82 Ky. 353 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1884
dmjvejred this opinion op the coujrt.
The appellant, Brizzalaro, instituted this action, obtaining an injunction and seeking to recover damages of the appellee for obstructing an alley by building upon it, which is alleged was granted to his vendors by one Arnold, the original owner of the estate, and under whom it is alleged both the appellant and appellees ■claim.
The law and facts were submitted to the court and a judgment rendered for the defendants.
Arnold, the original owner of the ground in controversy, on the fifteenth of January, 1867, executed to one Bárbaro a conveyance to a certain lot of ground in the city of Covington, defined by metes and bounds, and designating one of the lines in the following manner: “Thence northwardly with the east line of said bridge ■company sixty-five feet to a ten-foot alley (which extends from the east line of the said bridge property to Greenup street, running parallel with said Second street), thence eastwardly,” etc.
The ground described in this conveyance was subsequently sold for the purchase money and purchased by the appellant, Brizzalaro, and a conveyance containing the same boundary made to him by the commissioner of the Kenton Chancery Court. He is now claiming under Bárbaro’s deed.
The testimony shows that at the date of the convey
There is but little, if any, testimony establishing the ■right of the appellant to the use of the ground as a pass way, and the entire case must depend upon the .construction given the conveyance by Arnold to Barbaro. If by the terms of that instrument the easement is conveyed, it settles the question. It does not appear from whom Arnold derived title, and therefore the right to the use of the alley by the appellant is derived alone from Arnold’s conveyance to him. It is clear that this .ground in controversy was never dedicated to public use. The recitals in the conveyance to Barbaro did not .amount to a dedication, nor is it pretended that there was any such use. as gave to the public the right of way.
The plaintiff (the appellant) alleges in his petition that the existence and convenience of that alley formed -.a part of the consideration for the purchase, and it may
There was at least a covenant on the part of the vendor to open this street, the language of the conveyance plainly importing an obligation upon him to do so. It was also held in the case of Tufts v. The City of Charlestown that a conveyance of land bounding on a passageway of two rods wide, which is to be laid out between the premises and land of A., the grantor, to make and maintain all the fence between the passway and the premises, estops the grantor and those claiming under him to deny the existence of the passway.
In all of these cases there is something more in the conveyance than the mere recital as to the boundary.
Here the extent of the calls of the appellant’s deed is “to a ten-foot alley (which extends from the east line of said bridge property to Greenup street, running-parallel- with said Second street), thence eastwardly with south line of said alley forty-eight feet, thence' at .right angles southwardly sixty-live feet, to Second -street, the place of beginning.”
• It is a mere' recital in the conveyance that an alley •exists at a particular place, when such is not the. fact; and may operate to prevent the grantor from controverting the fact that such an alley is in existence. It amounts to nothing more than an estoppel, and is not a grant of the alley or the easement, as appurtenant to the premises. Such an alley appears on no plan or map, was never laid out on the premises by any survey, and the language used can not be tortured into an express or implied grant. The grantor may have designed to open this alley and nothing more, or this intention on his part may have constituted a part of the consideration of the purchase” as between the parties to the conveyance, yet if there is not a grant of the land constituting the alley, it can not affect an innocent purchase, although recorded.
The grantor, Arnold, may not be permitted to deny what he has stated in his deed, although untrue, but-this does not amount to a grant. The issue, as between the grantor and the grantee, in this case, if there were-no parties before the court but Bárbaro and Arnold, would be not as to whether the way in fact exists, but-is the grantor estopped to deny that fact.
The recital in the deed is simply an admission that certain facts exist, and whether true or false is not material, or the subject of inquiry, as between the-parties.
If Arnold has conveyed his interest to Bárbaro and the latter’s deed of record, this would affect any subsequent purchaser from Arnold. A mere recital, while it may work an estoppel, neither vests - nor divests the title, but does preclude the party making it from deny-. ing what he has stated. The appellee was neither a party nor privy to the conveyance from Arnold to> Barbaro.
Washburn says that <£a deed duly recorded is constructive notice of its existence and its contents, to all persons claiming what is thereby conveyed under the-same grantor by subsequent purchase or mortgage, but not to other per sons. ”
Appellee is claiming to have purchased his land of Arnold, but he is not claiming under the deed in which
All are not privies when purchasing different tracts-of land, because they happen to claim under the same grantor. Parties and privies mean the parties and privies to the particular conveyance. The grantees of' Bárbaro are not privies to Mrs. Boyd’s deed, nor Mrs.. Boyd's grantees privies to Barbara's deed. They are-privies to Arnold, but only as to the property conveyed by their respective grants.
In Harding v. Wilson, reported in 2 Bam. & Cress.,.. English Common Law, the lease of the premises described therein as abutting on an “intended way of' thirty feet wide,” it was held not to constitute a grant,, but a mere intention to open a street of that width. All the judges so agreed, but said that the lessee was entitled to a passway as matter of necessity, but the lanluage used did not control the action of the lessee, so a convenient way was left. In Hopkinson v. McKnight, 31 Newberry, the description in the deed bounded the-lot “a certain length on an eight-foot alley, and a certain additional length along said alley and street; said street being thirty feet wide; neither were open or used.”
The only question, it seems to us, in this case is: Are the appellants affected by the constructive notice, viz: the recording of the conveyance ? If privies to the deed, it might be argued that they are purchasers with notice, but being strangers to the conveyance under which ■appellee claims, the recitals in the deed do not conclude them, although they have purchased from the same grantor. As to the dedication of this property for public use, there is no proof of that fact or of its acceptance by the city, nor does the appellant, by his petition, place his right of recovery on that ground, but for the reason, as he maintains in his pleading if not in his brief, that the right to the easement passed by the deed from Arnold to Barbara, through whom appellant claims.
The judgment below must be affirmed;