197 A. 760 | Conn. | 1938
The judgment appealed from was rendered upon the retrial ordered in the appeal from the judgment on the first trial of the same case.
The trial court concluded that these facts caused the user of the tenants to enure to the benefit of the landlords (Shannon and McNally) for prescriptive purposes so that the period of such user may be tacked to that of the plaintiff as subsequent owner to make up the prescriptive period. The validity of this conclusion is decisive of the assignments of error.
The finding, now as before, states that none of the deeds or leases therein referred to "contained any specific reference to a right of way" and the defendant's contention is that, therefore, the user by the plaintiff and other tenants was not made "under and by virtue of any lease" and so may not be regarded as user by the landlord which is available for prescriptive purposes as originating and continuing adverse possession.
While a tenant cannot effect a disseisin in his landlord's favor or originate adverse possession or user unless the lease includes the land or easement, the inclusion need not necessarily be expressed; it suffices if it is impliedly included. Deregibus v. Silberman Furniture Co., supra, 639. Whether or not the easement here in question was within the leases was a question of fact, to be determined in the light of the circumstances, including the use made of it. Vinci v. O'Neill,
The admission of evidence of the plaintiff as to his use of the way from 1913 to 1916, over objection on the ground that the lease during that period was in the name of the plaintiff's father-in-law, although the plaintiff was in actual occupancy and use of the premises, even were it erroneous could not have harmed the defendant as much more than the prescriptive period elapsed thereafter before the first interruption in 1934.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.