51 A.2d 697 | Pa. | 1946
This appeal involves a controversy over the right to exclusive use of the rear portion of a garage located partly on land owned by appellee and partly on land of appellants.
The facts are undisputed. In 1919 the then owner of adjoining Lots 1344 and 1346 North 52nd Street, Philadelphia (hereinafter referred to as Lot 1344 and Lot 1346), erected a brick garage on the rear of the two lots, 15 feet in width by 27 1/2 feet in depth, covering an area of 15 by 15 feet (225 square feet) of the rear of Lot 1346 and 15 by 12 1/2 feet (187 1/2 square feet) of the rear of Lot 1344, with the only entrance being located in the portion erected on Lot 1346 and facing Master Street, on which this lot abuts. On November 30, 1925, the common owner mortgaged Lot 1344 to Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company et al., trustees, and on July 28, 1930, he conveyed the two lots to the Edward W. Woolman Building and Loan Association, subject to the mortgage on Lot 1344. On January 9, 1933, the mortgagees acquired title by foreclosure to Lot 1344, and on July 29, 1939, they conveyed this lot to Vincenzo Sannuti and Maria Sannuti, his wife, appellants. Appellee, Anna Stumpf Clements, acquired title to Lot 1346 by deed from the Liquidating Trustees of the Edward W. Woolman Building and Loan Association on July 25, 1941.
Appellants having threatened to erect a partition wall through the garage on their property line, appellee, on May 11, 1945, filed this bill in equity, averring *65 user of the entire garage by herself and her predecessors in title, and asking for an injunction, on the theory of an implied reservation of an easement, restraining appellants from tearing down or destroying any part of the garage, from directly or indirectly interfering with her full and complete use thereof, from trespassing or otherwise entering upon the garage premises, and from erecting or causing to be erected any structure or wall within the garage so as to interfere with the full use thereof by appellee. The bill did not aver that the use of the whole garage was necessary to the beneficial enjoyment of appellee's lot, and at the hearing on bill and answer appellee conceded that the right to use of the portion of the garage located on appellants' premises "is not claimed as a necessity." Nevertheless, after hearing, the court below granted the injunction as prayed for. Exceptions filed by appellants were dismissed and this appeal followed.
The court below held the rule applies, as stated by Mr. Justice MITCHELL, in Grace Methodist Episcopal Church v.Dobbins,
It is the traditionally established doctrine that there can be no easement, no incorporeal right, binding the servient tenement, the effect of which would be to deprive its owner of the right of use or possession thereof. "An easement is a liberty, privilege or advantage which one may have in the lands of another without profit . . . It may be merely negative . . . and may be created by a covenant or agreement not to use land in a certain way . . . But it cannot be an estate or interestin the land itself, or a right to any part of it" (Italics supplied): Slegel v. Lauer,
In Griffiths v. Morrison,
Again, in Whyte v. Builders' League of New York,
Another case in point is Adams v. Marshall,
Casey v. Canning,
Had the mortgage to appellants' grantor excluded the garage, or were this a case of a slight encroachment of a building upon or near the dividing line, as in numerous cases cited to us by appellee, somewhat different considerations would be involved. The mortgage to appellants' grantor did not contain any exception or reservation and did not mention the garage. The entire lot, No. 1344 North 52nd Street, described as "CONTAINING in front or breadth on the said Fifty-second Street Fifteen feet and extending of that width in length or depth Westward between parallel lines with the said *69 Master Street Eighty-five feet to a certain Four feet wide alley extending Northward into the said Master Street", including the land on which the portion of the garage in dispute stands, was mortgaged, "with the Buildings and Improvements thereon erected." Had there been any thought of reserving to the mortgagor the portion of the garage standing on the mortgaged premises, language would have been used making it plain that such was the intention of the parties.
Decree reversed and the bill is dismissed. Costs to be paid by appellee.