136 Iowa 261 | Iowa | 1907
The 'facts in the case are somewhat complicated, and the principles of law applicable thereto difficult of ascertainment. Plaintiff Carrigg, prior to the year 1890, was the owner of three lots in the city of Council Bluffs, having an aggregate frontage of one hundred and fifty feet on Fourth street. Adjoining these lots on the north was a strip of unplatted ground seven feet in width, lying between lot 1 and lot 181 belonging to a stranger, running back to an alley common to all the lots. The lots, as well as this strip, were one hundred feet in depth. Car-
Early in the year 1898, Carrigg brought an action against the plaintiff bank, which resulted in a compromise between them. By the terms of this compromise, which was consummated by a written agreement under date November 10, 1902, it was found that Camigg owed the bank $2,124, and the bank undertook to purchase certain judgments against Carrigg to pay $5,000 upon the $20,000 mortgage on Carrigg’s other property, and $150 as a commission to a loan agent, and that, when the aggregate thereof, to-wit, $10,378.64, should be repaid by Carrigg, the trust deeds should be released. And the rents of all the property covered by the trust deeds were assigned to the bank as security for the payment of the amount due from Carrigg to the bank. This was all done after this suit was commenced, and after defendant had fully developed its claim to the Bancroft Terrace property in cross-bills filed by it; and the agreement of settlement provided for the conduct of this litigation. It is also shown by the testimony that the rental
As said in Washburn on Easements, 81: “It may be considered as settled that, on the conveyance of one of several parcels of land belonging to the same owner, there is an implied grant or reservation, as the case may be, of all apparent or continuous easements or incidents of property which have been created or used by him during the unity of possession, though they could then have had no legal existence apart from his general ownership.” See, also, John Hancock Co. v. Patterson, 103 Ind., 582 (2 N. E. 188, 53 Am. Rep. 550), which is very closely in point. In Lampman v. Milks, 21 N. Y. 505, it is said:
The rule of the common law on this subject is well settled. The principle is that where the owner of two*270 tenements sells one of them, or tbe owner of an entire estate sells a portion, tbe purchaser takes tbe tenement or portion sold, witb all tbe benefits and burdens wbicb appear at tbe time of tbe sale, to belong to it, as between it and tbe property wbicb tbe vendor retains. Tbis is one of tbe recog-, nized modes by wbicb an easement or servitude is created. No easement exists so long as there is a unity of ownership, because tbe owner of tbe whole may at any time rearrange tbe qualities of tbe several parts; but, tbe moment a severance occurs by tbe sale of. a part, tbe right of tbe owner to redistribute the properties of tbe respective portions ceases and easements or servitudes are created, corresponding to tbe benefits and burdens mutually existing at tbe time of tbe sale. Tbis is not a rule for tbe benefit of tbe purchasers only, but is entirely reciprocal. Hence, if, instead of a benefit conferred, a burden has been imposed upon tbe portion sold, tbe purchasei*, provided tbe marks of tbis burden are open and visible, takes tbe property witb tbe servitude upon it. Tbe parties are presumed to contract in reference to tbe condition of tbe property at tbe time of tbe sale, and neither has a right, by altering arrangements then openly-existing, to change materially tbe relative value of tbe respective parts.
See, also, Reiners v. Youngs, 38 Hun (N. Y.) 335; Henry v. Koch, 80 Ky. 395 (44 Am. Rep. 484) ; Lebus v. Boston, 107 Ky. 98 (51 S. W. 609, 52, S. W. 956, 47 L. R. A. 79, 92 Am. St. Rep. 333) ; Jones on Easements, section 129. In tbe latter work it is said: “ Where one conveys a part of bis estate, be impliedly grants all those apparent or visible easements upon the part retained wbicb were at tbe time used by tbe grantor for tbe benefit of tbe part conveyed, and wbicb are reasonably necessary for tbe use of that part.”
Without further quotation from tbe authorities, we think that defendant, by its foreclosure proceeding, took title to lots 1, 2, and 3, witb all tbe easements and appurtenances thereto belonging, wbicb included tbe right to have tbe north wall of the building remain where it is, as well as all other rights necessary to tbe enjoyment of tbe building as
But we do not think that defendant was entitled to have the title to the seven-foot strip quieted in it. It never obtained any title thereto under its foreclosure proceedings. All that it received thereunder was title to lots 1, 2, and 3, and the building; thereon, with all easements and appurtenances thereto, and this included the right to use and occupy the building and that part of the strip which it covered, the same as it had theretofore been used by Car-rigg. These rights passed as appurtenant to the mortgage and the foreclosure sale, whether specifically mentioned or not; and all that defendant is entitled to, is to have this easement established.
Plaintiff bank had notice or knowledge of this easement on account of the construction of the building upon the strip; but it had no knowledge that defendant, either as mortgagee or otherwise, was claiming title to the lot, and it is entitled to have its lien established upon the strip subject to defendant’s easements thereon. Defendant is not entitled to have a decree quieting its title to the seven-foot strip, even as against Carrigg, for it is holding under, a mortgage foreclosure which in no manner covers the seven-foot strip, except as to easements therein. The difficulty here is not that Carrigg may not be estopped, but with defendant’s own title. It cannot have the strip included in its sheriff’s deed without reformation of its mortgage, and this it cannot do without giving all parties in interest an ap-portunity to redeem. It is not, however, liable for rent, and the plaintiff bank is not entitled to recover any. It may have its lien established against the seven-foot strip to the amount owing it by Carrigg; subject, however, to the easement which defendant holds therein, as above stated.
Plaintiff Carrigg is not, as we understand it, asking that his title be quieted to the seven-foot strip. If he makes
Plaintiff bank, at the time it took its trust deed and received its assignments, did not know that defendant was making any claim to the strip in dispute, save as it might have had notice from the fact that the building extended over onto the strip, that some claim was made. But its claims were of record, and, going to that record, it would have found that defendant’s mortgage covered nothing but lots 1, 2, and 3. True, when it received its last assignment in settlement of the litigation with Carrigg, it knew of defendant’s claim; but, as we have seen, the sheriff’s deed, under which it claims, cannot be made to cover the strip in dispute without reformation, and this cannot be decreed without opening up the matter to redemption. It knew from the records what defendant was claiming; but defendant’s claim was under its foreclosure proceedings and the sheriff’s deed executed pursuant thereto. That deed cannot in this action be made to cover any property not described in the mortgage, and that property is lots 1, 2, and 3. The easements and appurtenances to these lots, of course, followed the title, and these are all that passed by-the sheriff’s deed of the lots. John Hancock Co. v. Patterson, supra, is very much like this case, and the reasoning therein is peculiarly applicable here.
We are not called upon to determine who owns the part of the buildings or walls upon the seven-foot strip. The issues are not such as to involve that question, save incidentally. It must be conceded that defendant is not entitled to have the title to the seven-foot strip decreed to be in it; but, on the other hand, it cannot be held liable for rents because of the use of that part of the building which stands thereon. Plaintiff -bank is entitled to have a lien
The case is a most peculiar one, but, after due consideration, we are constrained to hold that the trial court was in error in its decree, and that the action should be remanded for one in harmony with this opinion.— Reversed and remanded.